Daily Mail

How £50bn of banknotes have ‘gone missing’

- By Ben Wilkinson Money Mail Deputy Editor

BANKNOTES worth £50billion have gone missing in circulatio­n, according to the public spending watchdog.

The National Audit Office said the unaccounte­d cash was not being used in transactio­ns or stashed in savings.

The watchdog’s report on cash comes as the use of notes and coins has fallen sharply over the last decade.

And it warns the bodies responsibl­e for the country’s cash system need to work better together to ensure enough coins and notes are produced and circulated more efficientl­y to avert a crisis.

The NAO said the missing £50billion could be held overseas, used in the ‘shadow economy’, or held in savings that haven’t been declared.

In July 2020 the number of notes in circulatio­n reached a record high of 4.4billion, with a monetary value of £76.5billion.

The Bank of England had estimated that 20 to 24 per cent of the value of notes in circulatio­n were being used or held for cash transactio­ns, with UK households holding a further 5 per cent as savings. Little is known about the remainder – worth about £50billion

The report found there was enough cash being made to meet demand, but raised concerns over how it was being distribute­d.

Ten years ago, cash was used in six in ten transactio­ns, but last year it was used in fewer than three in ten. Forecasts suggest it might be one in ten by 2028.

Covid-19 has potentiall­y accelerate­d the decline. Industry data suggests market demand for notes and coins plunged 71 per cent between early March and mid-April. However, cash use appears to have been recovering as businesses have reopened.

Five public bodies – the Treasury, the Bank of England, the Royal Mint, the Financial Conduct Authority and the Payments Systems Regulator – all play a role in the cash system.

But they lack a shared view of what was a good outcome for the consumer, the NAO said. It added that said older people and those on low incomes are particular­ly likely to rely on cash.

In March, the Government unveiled legislatio­n to protect access to it.

Labour MP Meg Hillier, chairman of the public accounts committee said: ‘Too many people already have to go out of their way to get their hands on cash.’ The Treasury said: ‘We’re developing new legislatio­n to ensure people can get hold of cash when they need it.’

‘Go out of their way’

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