Covid-19 support worth £4.5bn lost to error and fraud - BBC News support schemes
An estimated £4.5bn in Covid-19 support has been lost to error and fraud since 2020, the tax authority has revealed. The money was handed out through schemes to help households and businesses cope with the economic fallout of the pandemic.
The scale of the money lost was detailed in a letter to a committee of MPs overseeing government spending. The letter says the estimate of £4.5bn did not count money recovered by the UK’s tax authority, HMRC.
During the pandemic the government spent billions on a package of support to keep the economy afloat when lockdown restrictions were in place. Last year a forecast by the UK’s official economic analyst, the Office for Budget Responsibility, estimated the total cost of pandemic-related rescue measures to be £310bn.
The chair of the Treasury Select Committee, Harriett Baldwin, asked the government to provide a breakdown of how much of that money was lost to error and fraud. In response, the chief executive of HMRC, Jim Harra, said the figure was estimated to be £4.5bn in total across two financial years, 2020-21 and 2021-22. Of this sum, £3.5bn was lost through the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme, £1bn through the Self Employed Income Support Scheme and £71m through the Eat Out To Help Out.
HMRC is in the process of attempting to recover Covid support lost to error and fraud. By the end of March 2022, HMRC said it had recovered more than £762m through compliance activity.
Lord Agnew resigned as a Treasury minister last year, attacking the government’s handling of fraudulent Covid business loans.
Not only did the Tory government fritter away billions on unsuitable PPE and useless testing schemes but they also failed to recover billions given away to undeserving cases …