Covid fraudsters stole £4.9bn from Bounce Back Loan scheme, watchdog report finds
MP fury after Covid fraudsters stole £5bn from Sunak’s Bounce Back Loan scheme as Government’s basic counter fraud checks are accused of being ‘too little, too late’ letting ‘fraudsters slip through its fingers’
Fraudsters have stolen nearly £5billion from the Government’s Covid Bounce Back Loan scheme Spending watchdog said basic anti-fraud measures were ‘inadequate’ and implemented ‘too slowly’Checks to stop firms applying for more than one loan were put in place a month after scheme was launchedBy then, more than £28billion had already been paid out and estimated fraud levels were ‘high’ MPs heard Ministers knew six in ten bounce-back loans might never be repaid but was ‘risk worth taking’
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Furious MPs today claimed fraudsters were able to steal nearly £5billion from Chancellor Rishi Sunak’s Covid Bounce Back Loan scheme because the Government’s anti-fraud measures were ‘too little too late’.
A damning report by the spending watchdog has found that controls to ensure companies were not applying for more than one bounce back loan were ‘inadequate’ and put in place ‘too slowly’.
The National Audit Office said that by the time the Government implemented any anti-fraud measures in June last year – a month after the scheme was launched – more than £28billion had already been paid out. Other measures did not begin until September 2020 as Ministers focussed on getting the loans out to support businesses that were struggling during the pandemic, the watchdog said.
In its report, the NAO also said that around £17billion may never be repaid due to fraudulent activity as well as legitimate borrowers defaulting, citing official estimates.
The watchdog added that the Government knew the risks as it launched the scheme, but had to weigh them against the consequences of not getting money to businesses quickly. The findings echo evidence given to MPs last winter that Ministers knew that six in ten bounce-back loans might never be repaid, but decided it was a ‘risk worth taking’.
Under Mr Sunak’s scheme, firms could borrow up to £50,000 interest-free for 12 months, with the loan guaranteed by the Government. It was a lifeline for small firms, but has also provided rich pickings for fraudsters who disappear, leaving the taxpayer to reimburse banks.
Responding to the NAO’s findings, MPs on the Public Accounts Committee branded the Government’s counter-fraud measures ‘too little too late’.
Labour chairwoman Meg Hillier said the Bounce Back Loan scheme ‘came with colossal risks of fraud and error which are only now becoming clearer’. She said: ‘The Government is still counting the true cost, but these latest figures make for sobering reading.
‘Around £17billion may never be paid back, including potentially almost £5billion lost to fraud and error.
‘The Government has tried to impose some counter fraud measures but it’s too little, too late. It’s now focussing on recovering money from organised crime, yet many of the smaller scale fraudsters will have slipped through its fingers.’
Today’s bombshell report appears to vindicate warnings made by the Government’s own development bank in May last year that the scheme was vulnerable to abuse by ‘individuals and organised crime’.
Keith Morgan, at that time chief executive of the British Business Bank which administers the programme, wrote to then Business Secretary Alok Sharma to issue formal objections on the grounds of ‘propriety, value for money and feasibility’.
NAO boss Gareth Davies said: ‘Government prioritised getting bounce back loans to small businesses quickly but failed to put adequate fraud prevention measures in place. One impact of these decisions is apparent in the high levels of estimated fraud.’
Con artists set up dormant companies and use them as a front to claim money under the Bounce Back Loan Scheme, then close the firms and vanish.
To make a successful application under the scheme, fraudsters have to convince a lender that their company was registered before April 2020 and is still operating. That has created a lucrative market in dormant firms.
Auditing giant PwC, which has been hired by the Government, has estimated 7.5 per cent of loans might be lost to fraud, at a potential £3.5billion cost to the taxpayer. However, the report notes that the Government estimated fraudulent loans were worth £4.9billion as of March.
Sarah Munby, permanent secretary at the Department for Business, told the Public Accounts Committee in November last year that Ministers were ‘absolutely concerned about fraud’ when the scheme launched, but took the view that ‘to act was better than not to act’.
‘Those estimates we used at the time around the potential loss rising up to 60 per cent… that was a risk that people were prepared to take,’ she added.
Sir Tom Scholar, permanent secretary at the Treasury, said Mr Sunak approved the scheme because he was worried that without it hundreds of thousands of businesses might ‘go bust’.
In the March Budget, the Chancellor announced that £100million would be used to fund a taskforce of 1,000 investigators in HM Revenue & Customs to crack down on the misuse of the furlough and self-employment income support schemes.
A Department of Business spokesman said: ‘The Government support schemes have provided a lifeline to millions of businesses across the UK – helping them survive the pandemic and protecting millions of jobs.
‘We are continuing to crack down on Covid-19 fraud and will not tolerate those that seek to defraud the British taxpayer.
‘We are working closely with lenders and enforcement authorities to minimise fraud and ensure those that have committed fraud face consequences.’
Meg Hillier (right), Labour chairwoman of the Public Accounts Committee, said Rishi Sunak’s Bounce Back Loan scheme ‘came with colossal risks of fraud and error which are only now becoming clearer’ (left, the Chancellor)
The Government only put in some basic anti-fraud checks on the small Covid loans it was providing to businesses once more than £28 billion had already been paid out, the spending watchdog has said
The bounce back loans propped up 1.5 million businesses, potentially saving many from bankruptcy. Many businesses were also paid within 24 to 48 hours of submitting an application (stock image)
The Government has underwritten 80 per cent of all CBILS loans and 100 per cent of BBLS lending – though banks will probably need to exhaust all their options before asking the taxpayer.
Some lenders have already started paying to have companies reinstated on Companies House in an attempt to recover the debt.
The bounce back loans propped up 1.5 million businesses, potentially saving many from bankruptcy.
Many businesses were also paid within 24 to 48 hours of submitting an application.
Instead, the Government has focused on detecting problems after the loans have been paid out. But the NAO criticised some of the approach to this.
The business department has used the National Investigation Service (Natis), a law enforcement body, to track down major fraud in the scheme.
But Natis only has the capacity to pursue at most 50 cases per year. It received more than 2,100 intelligence reports by October this year.
Meanwhile, the Government is relying on banks to police midsize and small fraud.
Banks provided the loans to businesses, but Ministers have promised to fully reimburse the lenders if loans are not repaid.
By April, lenders claimed to have stopped nearly £2billion in fraudulent loans from going out, and discovered £5.3million that had been paid.
The scheme was administered by the British Business Bank on behalf of the Government.
The bank’s chief executive Catherine Lewis La Torre said: ‘The bank welcomes the NAO’s findings that ”most of the loans – over 90 per cent, or £39.7billion – went to micro-businesses” and that ”businesses have found the loans useful to address cashflow shortages during the pandemic”.
‘This is supported by the bank’s own research which finds ”that about 70 per cent used the funds for working capital and day-to-day expenses”.
‘The bank also welcomes the finding that ”most businesses have started to repay loans”, evidenced by recent data published by the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy (BEIS) and the bank, showing the overwhelming majority of businesses are meeting their monthly repayments.
‘From the launch of the scheme, the British Business Bank has worked with lenders and across government to prevent, detect and counter fraud and put in place as quickly as possible additional measures to further mitigate fraud risks.’
In the March Budget, Chancellor Rishi Sunak announced that £100million would be used to fund a taskforce of 1,000 investigators in HM Revenue & Customs to crack down on the misuse of the furlough and self-employment income support schemes.
Federation of Small Businesses national vice chair Martin McTague said: ‘When they created Bounce Back Loans last summer, the Government and British Business Bank were faced with an extremely difficult task: getting cash into as many of these small firms as possible, as quickly as possible, whilst rightly doing all they could to shut out fraudsters in a fast-moving situation.
‘After weeks of the original interruption loan scheme simply not working for the smallest firms most in need, hold ups with the bounce back programme would have been catastrophic.’
David Clarke, chairman of the Fraud Advisory Panel charity and the former head of the police’s National Fraud Intelligence Bureau, said: ‘We forecast that crooks would use middle men to help them commit fraud to get their hands on taxpayer-backed loans. ‘
Being transparent and publishing who received these loans as we called for is crucial.’
He added: ‘My plea to whistleblowers is report anything that looks dodgy.’
Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman Christine Jardine said: ‘People will be horrified to learn that the system many have relied on may have been abused by fraudsters.
‘The Government must ensure that people are not able to profit from abuse of the system.
‘We need to ensure checks and balances are proportionate and manageable for businesses, without being an open door for criminals. This is yet another reason why we need an urgent inquiry into the Government’s handing off every aspect of this crisis. Otherwise we risk seeing mistakes repeated time and again.’