The £2 billion figure cited in the UK-OpenAI talks is a powerful headline number, but its ambiguity raises more questions than it answers. Was this proposed as a one-time payment for perpetual access, or was it the estimated annual cost of a national subscription?
ChatGPT Plus costs users $20 (approx. £16) a month. For a population of roughly 55 million adults in the UK, the annual cost would be over £10.5 billion. The £2 billion figure is therefore perplexing. It might represent a massively discounted bulk price, a subsidy for a limited number of users, or perhaps a one-off infrastructure and setup fee.
The lack of clarity on this key detail is significant. A recurring annual cost of £2 billion would be a far greater long-term commitment than a one-time payment. The discussions between Peter Kyle and Sam Altman would have had to delve into these financial models.
Without this detail, it’s difficult to fully assess the proposal’s viability. The story highlights the challenge of translating a simple subscription model into a national public service, where the scale and nature of the financial commitment would need to be radically different.
