Senior BBC pay 'to keep falling', says Lord Patten

Lord Patten was speaking to the BBC's Hardtalk programme

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Future leaders of the BBC will not be paid as much as current Director General Mark Thompson, says the chairman of the BBC Trust, Lord Patten.

Thompson, who took up his post in 2004, earned £779,000 last year and £838,000 the year before.

"If there is another director general during my time as chairman of the Trust, he or she won't be paid that," Lord Patten told BBC Hardtalk.

Lord Patten said he will "bear down" on other executive pay at the corporation.

"The basic proposal is you cap the average of senior executive pay to the median pay in the organisation," he said.

Asked whether he thought BBC executives were paid too much, Lord Patten said: "I'm sure they're worth every penny of it but they're not going to be paid as much in the future."

In July the BBC's annual report said it was on target to reduce the senior manager pay bill by 25% before the end of 2011.

The paper stated wages had been reduced by 18.3% and on average, new senior managers were paid 8.7% less than the previous post holder.

'Painful choice'

During the interview, Hardtalk's Stephen Sackur asked Lord Patten whether BBC services would suffer once the budget cuts were in place.

The BBC has to cut its spending by 20% - equivalent to 16% for the next five years in real terms - after last year's licence fee settlement.

Andy Murray at Wimbledon this year Lord Patten said there are no plans to scale back the BBC' coverage of Wimbledon

"I hope it's not going to do serious damage," Lord Patten said.

He admitted the Trust were in talks with senior executives about how they can "accommodate the BBC" to the new budget.

"But, for heaven's sake, we're talking about the BBC running for the next five years on three and a half billion pounds a year. Plus the income it can raise from its commercial activities. Now we should be able to run a damn good public broadcaster on three and a half billion a year."

He said the BBC would focus on its "core and most valuable services" such as children, drama, news and factual programmes.

"Those are the things we'll have to spend more money on, we won't be able to spend as much money on sport. I suspect we won't be able to spend as much money on entertainment," he added.

The BBC has reduced its Formula One coverage, which Lord Patten said was a "painful choice".

"Everybody who loves motor racing is really cross with us because we did motor racing really well - and we will still be doing motor racing but not exclusively."

When asked whether the BBC's extensive coverage of the Six Nations rugby and Wimbledon were going to remain in place, he said: "Yes, I very much hope so."

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