The images from La Guaira are harrowing. Rubble, grief and the relentless tropical heat. But amidst the catastrophe, a familiar British voice cuts through the chaos. The BBC is there, as it has been for generations, providing sober, detailed reporting from the disaster zone. And for all the hand-wringing about the licence fee and the rise of digital upstarts, this is a reminder that public service broadcasting, when properly funded, remains a world leader.
Let us be clear: the market does not always deliver. Commercial news outlets, driven by shareholder returns, have cut foreign bureaus and rely on wire services. They chase clicks with breathless headlines. The BBC, for all its flaws, maintains a network of correspondents who speak the language and understand the context. That costs money. About £159 per household per year, to be precise. A bargain, if you value informed citizenship over viral trivia.
The La Guaira coverage is a case study in efficiency of information. The BBC’s team on the ground is providing context that a cable news channel, desperate for ratings, would miss: the political instability that preceded the landslide, the chronic underinvestment in infrastructure, the role of climate change. This is not just news. It is analysis. It is the sort of fiscal responsibility in information that a functioning democracy requires.
Of course, the cynics will ask: why should the taxpayer fund this? The answer lies in the concept of public goods. A well-informed electorate is a public good, like clean air or national defence. The market underprovides it because the benefits are diffuse. A single viewer cannot capture the full value of knowing about La Guaira’s plight. So the state steps in. That is not socialism. That is common sense.
The BBC’s budget is under constant pressure. Gilt yields have risen, making borrowing more expensive, and the government is looking for savings. But cutting the BBC’s foreign coverage would be a false economy. The cost of ignorance is far higher. Ask the bond markets: instability in one region can ripple through global capital flows. Understanding Venezuela’s collapse is not just a humanitarian exercise. It is a matter of financial intelligence.
So let us salute the BBC’s team in La Guaira. They are doing what the market cannot: providing depth, context and a sense of shared humanity. For that, the licence fee is a small price to pay. The alternative is a world where news is just another commodity, traded for clicks and discarded. That would be a disaster of a different kind.
As for La Guaira itself, our thoughts are with the victims. But we must also think about how we understand such tragedies. The BBC’s coverage is a reminder that some things are worth paying for. Even if the accountants disagree.








