A former head of TVNZ has warned the BBC not to copy New Zealand's television funding system.
The British Government is looking at dropping the BBC TV licence which pays to make its programmes. One option is an NZ on Air system, which gives money to an independent agency instead.
But former TVNZ chief executive Julian Mounter - an Englishman brought here in the 1980s to shift state television to a business model - has warned his countrymen in a letter to the Times that the New Zealand method leads to a decline in public broadcasting.
"NZ on Air chose to spend the money, in part, on what I considered to be pure public service programming ... however it also spent it on what I considered to be commercial programming, that which would be easily funded by advertising or sponsorship," he wrote.
"As a result it became much more difficult for us to make sufficient non-commercial programmes, which I believed were an essential ingredient for any national broadcaster to provide."