The New Zealand Herald

Seven wage subsidy charges

MSD prosecutio­ns add to civil actions and referrals to Serious Fraud Office

- Michael Neilson

The Ministry of Social Developmen­t has filed criminal charges in seven cases of alleged abuse of the Wage Subsidy Scheme, involving close to $370,000 of taxpayer money.

It is also preparing criminal charges for a further eight cases, and taking civil action in 11.

This is on top of 10 larger and more complex cases referred in October to the Serious Fraud Office.

The latest data shows close to $800 million has been recouped in wage subsidy repayments.

The subsidy scheme paid out close to $14 billion to businesses which could prove a loss in income due to the pandemic and related restrictio­ns.

Along with public pleas for businesses to return funding they did not need, MSD redeployed the majority of its benefit fraud investigat­ions staff to monitoring the scheme.

Investigat­ors initially sought written confirmati­on from about 1000 businesses it had identified as needing to provide further informatio­n they had met wage subsidy criteria.

The ministry has now revealed it has filed criminal charges in seven cases involving $369,738.80 of public money, in the Auckland, Waitākere, Christchur­ch and Hawera District Courts.

“They involve a mix of receiving, dishonestl­y taking or using a document, and forgery charges,” a spokesman said in a statement.

One of those cases resulted in a guilty plea in the Auckland District Court in February when the individual admitted three charges of receiving wage subsidy funds they were not entitled to, totalling $18,745.60, which they have since repaid.

Sentencing is expected to happen this year.

That case was understood to be the first criminal prosecutio­n relating to improper access to the “high trust” subsidy scheme.

MSD has completed 14,525 prepayment and post-payment checks on wage subsidy applicatio­ns, resolved 5535 allegation­s of wage subsidy misuse, completed 528 wage subsidy-related investigat­ions, and recouped $794.6 million in wage subsidy repayments.

“MSD is preparing criminal charges for a further eight cases of wage subsidy abuse and is progressin­g civil recovery action in another 11 cases,” the statement said.

“This is on top of 10 cases involving larger sums of money and complex investigat­ions that were referred by MSD to the Serious Fraud Office in October 2021.”

It comes after Minister for Social Developmen­t and Employment Carmel Sepuloni yesterday revealed new data that showed the wage subsidy schemes had supported 47 per cent of jobs in the country.

In 2020, 69 per cent of employed men and 54 per cent of women were supported by a wage subsidy.

This fell to 54 per cent and 41 per cent respective­ly in 2021.

“This new report shows that the wage subsidies served to protect jobs and support businesses that might otherwise have been lost,” she said.

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