Western Mail

£62m paid out to cover fraud loans

- AUGUST GRAHAM newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

BANKS have found that £850m was borrowed by fraudsters from a UK Government­backed loan scheme that was launched during the pandemic.

The British Business Bank said that while estimates of fraud range into the billions, the lenders administer­ing the scheme have now confirmed hundreds of millions of pounds were defrauded.

Ultimately, the taxpayer will have to pick up the bill for any companies that do not pay back the loans that they took. The Government has repaid banks £62m for the fraudulent loans so far. Some of these will be companies that went out of business but others will be loans to fraudsters.

Speaking to MPs, Patrick Magee, the BBB’s chief commercial officer, said the latest estimate of the amount of fraud in the £47bn Bounce Back Loan Scheme is now 7.5%, or less than £4bn.

“That’s the estimate of fraud, what we have in the book now is reports

from the lenders of suspected fraud, where they have greater evidence around that. One’s a sampling estimate and one’s actual evidence,” he told the Treasury Select Committee.

“That figure is now £850m or 1.7% of the book. I fully expect that that number will go up, whether that goes all the way to 7.5%, that’s how we’ll measure the effectiven­ess,” he said.

He added that the Government has paid out £62m to banks for loans that are suspected to be fraud.

Under the scheme, companies could borrow up to £50,000 from normal banks. To encourage the banks to get money out, the Government promised to cover any loans that were not paid back.

So far, banks have claimed £1.9bn from the scheme and about £350m of that has been paid out.

Treasury director general of public spending Cat Little said that the officials expect to claw back £7bn from several different UK Government programmes.

“We’ve invested another £700m into tackling fraud. These are quite top-down rough numbers – but we estimate that the return on that will generate more than £7bn in additional returns over the next five years,” she told MPs.

In all, around £17bn is estimated to never be paid back to lenders in the Bounce Back Loan Scheme. This cost will fall on Government, but the estimate is still very uncertain.

The loans were paid out in record speed in order to ensure that companies could keep going during lockdown.

 ?? ?? Patrick Magee, chief commercial officer at the British Business Bank
Patrick Magee, chief commercial officer at the British Business Bank

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom