Question Author
The BBC publishes the pay and perks of its top 107 executives every three months, but still refuses to name around 25 staff on salaries of more than £150,000 who it claims do not have enough responsibility for spending the licence fee to merit a place on the public list. About 380 managerial staff are paid six-figure salaries, but the BBC still refuses to reveal the pay of its on-screen celebrities.
The total pay for presenters and contributors to its television and radio programmes is £229 million each year.
In April, Robert Johnston, who as “reward director” is paid almost £200,000, apologised after The Times disclosed that he had attempted to manipulate salary information to hide the number of staff earning more than £100,000.
A BBC spokesman said: “The BBC remains committed to cutting the BBC senior management pay bill. Over the next three years the BBC will reduce this pay bill by 25 per cent and continue to discount in future recruitment from the private sector where a recent report found we are paying between 25-65 per cent less for our senior managers than comparable organisations.”