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Bounce back loans: Taxpayers may lose £26bn on unpaid loans

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Up to 60% of emergency pandemic loans made under the Bounce Back scheme may never be repaid, a report by the government’s spending watchdog says.

The National Audit Office (NAO) said taxpayers could lose as much as £26bn, from fraud, organised crime or default.

The lending scheme carried lighter checks than others and was aimed at small businesses unable to access other pandemic funding support.

A recent BBC investigation revealed how fraudsters were using the loan system.

The BBC also reported last week that the government was warned back in May that the scheme was at “very high risk of fraud” from “organised crime”.

The government said it has tried to minimise fraud through lenders’ background checks.

Extension

The scheme provides firms with 100% government-backed finance worth up to £50,000.

Demand has been greater than anticipated, and the total value of these loans is now expected to be £38bn-£48bn, up from an estimate of £18bn-£26bn.

They do not have to be paid off for six years, and are interest-free for the first 12 months.

The loan scheme is an extension of earlier offers which some businesses complained they could not access as the lending criteria was too strict.

The NAO report warned that the speed with which the scheme was rolled out heightened the fraud risk. It took a month to ensure businesses could not receive more than one loan.

The Public Accounts Committee said it was the government’s largest and most risky business support scheme.

It says it will not assess the value-for-money of the scheme, as the loans will not start being paid back until May next year.

The NAO analysis said losses from the scheme are likely to reach “significantly above” normal estimates for public-sector fraud of 0.5% to 5%.

This would mean that more than £1.9bn had been lost to criminals, leaving taxpayers on the hook when they failed to pay the money back, it said.

The NAO’s report also said the UK’s five biggest banks will make nearly £1bn between them from the scheme.

‘Taxpayer’s expense’

Meg Hillier, chair of the Public Accounts Committee, said the loans had been a vital lifeline for many businesses.

But she added that “the government estimates that up to 60% of the loans could turn bad – this would be a truly eye-watering loss of public money”.

“The bounce back loan scheme got money into the hands of small businesses quickly, and will have stopped some from going under.

“But the scheme’s hasty launch means criminals may have helped themselves to billions of pounds at the taxpayer’s expense.

“Sadly, many firms won’t be able to repay their loans and the banks will be quick to wash their hands of the problem.

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