In a report today, the Public Accounts Committee says that the
Department for Business Energy & Industrial Strategy’s (BEIS)
was “complacent in preventing fraud” in the 100%
taxpayer-guaranteed Bounceback Loan Scheme (BBLS) and that
Government “cannot just accept” the level of unpaid debt it
currently plans to, calling it “unacceptable” that the Department
“has no long-term plans for recovering overdue debt”.
The Committee’s previous report on the BBLS in December 2020
warned that the design of the BBLS had “exposed the taxpayer to
potentially huge losses” and despite inconsistent data, latest
estimates show that of £47 billion paid out in Bounceback Loans,
£17 billion is already expected to be lost, £4.9 billion of that
- over 10% of the loans - to fraud.
The Committee says BEIS is now “placing too much reliance on
lenders to minimise taxpayer losses” but the Scheme’s design
“does not incentivise lenders to do this”. The focus on delivery
of the loans “at breakneck speed” meant lenders were not required
to do credit or affordability checks or even verify application
information, and to offset this risk to lenders the Government
guaranteed the loans 100% - meaning that if the borrower does not
repay the loan, the taxpayer will. This means “business
survival has come” at a “staggering” cost to the taxpayer: money
that “could have been spent on improving existing public
services, reducing taxes or to reduce government
borrowing”.
The Committee says both BEIS and the British Business Bank (BBB)
missed opportunities to prevent fraud and BEIS’ subsequent focus
on ‘top-tier’ fraudsters puts “other government schemes at risk
due to the lack of a deterrent effect”. Neither BEIS or the BBB
were sufficiently prepared to respond to significant economic
shocks.” The long-term impact of the Scheme is uncertain, but it
has brought other unintended negative consequences, including
“distorting the SME lending market in favour of the largest UK
banks” converse to the BBB’s “objective of creating a diverse
finance market for SMEs”
, Chair of the Public Accounts Committee,
said: “With weary inevitability we see a government
department using the speed and scale of its response to the
pandemic as an excuse for complacent disregard for the cost to
the taxpayer. More than two years on BEIS has no long- term plans
to chase overdue debt and is not focussed on lower-level
fraudsters who may well just walk away with billions of
taxpayers’ money.
“The Committee was unpleasantly surprised to find how little
Government learned from the 2008 banking crisis and even now are
not at all confident that these hard lessons will be embedded for
future emergencies. BEIS must commit now to identifying what
anti-fraud measures are needed at the start of any new emergency
scheme so the taxpayer is better protected in future. It also
needs to set out the trade-offs and what level of fraud it will
tolerate at the outset.”
PAC report conclusions and
recommendations
-
The Department and the Bank delivered the Scheme at
breakneck speed, but the long-term impact of the Scheme is
uncertain.The Scheme was launched within 11 days of
its announcement. The Scheme met its initial goal to get money
to a range of businesses quickly, delivering most of the £47
billion of loans to businesses in its first two months. The
Department asserts that early indications are that the Scheme
has helped business survival in the short term. While most
businesses have started to repay loans, it is only when
borrowers reach the end of their six- or ten-year loan period
and either repay their loans, or the loans are written off if
businesses have not survived, that we will be able to judge the
Scheme’s impact. The Department estimated, however, that
between 31% and 48% of loans will not be repaid – a narrowing
on the estimate in its 2019-20 Annual Report & Accounts
that up to 60% of loans would not be repaid. The Scheme is
already expected to lose an estimated £17 billion of taxpayers’
money as a result of both genuine borrowers who are unable to
repay and because of fraud. The Department has evaluation plans
covering the next three years and it expects the first tranche
of the evaluation in February 2022. But it has yet to identify
the necessary control group of similar companies who took out
loans in order to measure the success of the
Schemes.
Recommendation: The Department should put in place a clear
strategy to manage the long-term legacy of the Scheme within a
month of the publication of its evaluation report.
The Bank should also write to us with details of its plans to
measure the Scheme’s long-term impact, including identifying a
reliable control group, within a month of the publication of
Department’s strategy.
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The potential Scheme losses are eye-watering, and we
are not convinced the Department has the data it needs to
manage the risks to the taxpayer. The Department
estimated in its 2020-21 Annual Report and Accounts that it
would lose £17 billion as a result of the Scheme, of which £4.9
billion was because of fraud. We have seen similarly high
levels of expected losses due to fraud in other Covid-19
business support schemes, with losses from fraud and error
within the furlough and self-employment schemes estimated at
£5.7 billion. This staggering amount of taxpayer money could
have been spent on improving existing public services. The
Department admits that fraud within the Scheme falls well
outside what it would consider a tolerable level, although it
cannot tell us what that level should be. Its fraud estimate
does not include all potential types of fraud, such as
suspected turnover inflation fraud to claim larger loans than a
borrower is entitled to. To date, it has allocated just £32
million to countering fraud and does not know whether lenders
or other stakeholders, including law enforcement agencies, have
the resources they need to counter fraud. The Department
reports its estimates of losses once each year and these have a
high level of uncertainty. The Bank’s loan data from the 24
commercial lenders under the Scheme has data limitations as
each lender categorises and reports data in a slightly
different way. The Department is trying to improve its approach
to quantifying losses in the Scheme, but it is almost two years
since its launch.
Recommendation: The Department should, within the next 3
months, develop a strategy setting out the increase needed in
Scheme counter-fraud resources for all relevant government
stakeholders to both reduce fraud levels to a tolerable level and
to maximise recoveries.
As part of its Treasury Minute response, the Department should
explain how it intends to improve the accuracy and timeliness of
its estimates of losses within the Scheme.
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The Department has been complacent in preventing Scheme
fraud and its prioritisation of ‘top tier’ fraudsters puts
other government Schemes at risk. The risks that we
identified at the outset of the Scheme have now materialised.
The Department requested, and received, a ministerial direction
at the start of the Scheme as it expected high levels of
losses. Even so, counter-fraud measures were introduced too
slowly. For example, it took a month after the Scheme’s launch
to set up checks to prevent duplicate applications because of
delays in joining up information held by different parties. The
Scheme did not require lenders to check a businesses’ claimed
turnover against its records for existing customers; this meant
some borrowers received a larger loan than they were entitled
to. It also took the Department 8 months to introduce checks to
ensure businesses’ claimed turnover was correct, by which time
93% of the loans by value had been issued and some received
more than they were entitled to. The Department and the Bank
have placed less emphasis on tackling those smaller scale
fraudsters who deliberately misstated their details, such as
turnover, than on organised crime. The consequences of
fraudulent activity include the individual being banned from
being a company director or being able to borrow in the future,
but this assumes they are pursued and caught. The Department’s
response for ‘smaller’ fraudulent claims is limited and may
mean that fraudsters will walk away with the money – something
the Department’s fraud-loss estimates suggests is a real risk.
We are concerned that its complacency towards smaller scale
fraud and turnover misstatement provides a limited deterrent
effect and could encourage fraudsters to try to take advantage
of other government schemes.
Recommendation: Next time the Department launches an
emergency business support scheme, it should be explicit on the
trade-offs and level of fraud it is prepared to tolerate from the
outset.
The Department should urgently outline how it will change its
plans to adopt a more robust approach to reducing all types of
reducing all types of fraud, and should commit to including
anti-fraud measures from the outset so that it acts as a
deterrent effect for other schemes.
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We are concerned that the Department is placing too
much reliance on lenders to minimise taxpayer losses without
incentivising them to do so. When the Scheme launched
the Department relied solely on lenders to prevent taxpayer
losses by requiring them to do ‘know your customer’,
and ‘anti-money laundering’ and some basic counter-fraud
checks. It is also relying on lenders to recover overdue loans
rather than doing so itself, as it considers commercial lenders
to be the experts in this field and already follow similar
recovery processes for standard commercial loans. The Scheme
guarantees to cover 100% of lenders’ losses which offers
limited commercial incentives for them to pursue borrowers for
more than the minimum period under scheme rules. The Department
relies on contractual, legal and regulatory obligations to
ensure lenders comply with the Scheme. Evidence on the
effectiveness of the lenders’ operations is slim, but there are
some worrying indicators. The Bank runs a lender assurance
programme to test whether lenders adhere to Scheme rules; and
the commercial lending regulator wrote to lenders in July 2021
to remind them of their obligations to report fraud and put in
place adequate counter-fraud resources. But none of the
witnesses could tell us how much lenders are spending on this.
The department now plans to create a simple dashboard of
management information to improve its ability to hold lenders
to account. Together this gives an unconvincing picture of how
lenders are bearing down on large amounts of outstanding debt
and we are not convinced that lender audits are a replacement
for commercial incentives.
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Recommendation: The Department should, as part of its
Treasury Minute response, set out how it will use legal,
regulatory and contractual incentives to improve the lenders’
performance in managing the loans and the risks to the
taxpayer. Furthermore, it should report to the Committee on
individual lender performance using the dashboard data which
was due to be presented to the new cross-Whitehall counter
fraud board.
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It is unacceptable that the Department has no plans to
recover outstanding debt after lenders have pursued borrowers
for up to 12 months. There is no minimum term that
lenders are required to pursue borrowers for payments. Lenders
are not expected to continue to pursue borrowers after 12
months. Lenders can claim on the government guarantee before
the end of the 12-month period if they have conducted what they
consider to be a “sufficient and robust level of recoveries”
and have concluded that no further payment is likely. The Bank
and the Department assert that lenders could pursue overdue
payments for longer than 12 months if they chose to do so, and
believe it would be in the borrower’s commercial interest to
repay if they want to maintain their bank account with that
lender. The Department was also not in a position to state what
the shortest time period had been for a lender to claim their
guarantee. We are concerned that this presents an overly
optimistic view about lenders’ incentives to recover funds and
how the Bank’s lender assurance programme would work towards
recovering unpaid loans beyond this 12-month period. The
Department has, however, agreed to consider alternative
approaches to recovering loans.
Recommendation: The Department should, as part of its
Treasury Minute response, set out its strategy for collecting
overdue payments after the lenders have completed their 12-month
requirements. In addition, the Department should write to the
Committee and provide further information on what the shortest
time period has been for a lender to claim on their guarantee to
date and how this compares to the
average.
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The Scheme has distorted the Small and Medium
Enterprise (SME) lending market in favour of the largest UK
banks, which goes against the Bank’s objective of creating a
diverse finance market for SMEs. The Scheme’s low
interest rate made it uneconomical for smaller or alternative
lenders to participate to the same extent as larger lenders.
This meant that some smaller lenders did not take part in the
Scheme and larger lenders, who traditionally are less active in
the SME lending market, lent relatively more. This resulted in
the largest UK banks taking a 90% share in the Scheme’s lending
to SMEs, distorting competition in the SME lending market as
the Department and Bank expected at scheme launch. While we are
encouraged to hear that the Department believes diversity is
returning to the lending market, we remain concerned about its
ability to identify and address any unintended or unforeseen
consequences and the longer-term impact of the Scheme on the
lending market.
Recommendation: The Bank should develop a strategy to
mitigate the negative impact of the Scheme on the SME lending
market and publish its findings in its next Small Business
Finance Market report. The Department should,
alongside its Treasury Minute response, identify the unintended
consequences of the scheme and what impact these have
had.
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The Department has not yet identified how it will share
the lessons from the Scheme. The Department asserts
that it has applied some of the lessons it has learned from
this Scheme in the subsequent Recovery Loan Scheme, such as
introducing additional reporting requirements on lenders. It
also recognises that it needs to ensure stronger counter-fraud
capability and data-sharing across government to be in place
from the start of any future scheme. Yet these learnings should
have been obvious following the Department’s experience in the
Financial Crisis when its approach was similarly reactive. We
are surprised that the Department and the Bank were so
ill-prepared to respond an economic shock, irrespective of the
nature of the pandemic. The Department recognises that it would
have been possible to design the outline of the Scheme five
years ago, but it would not have planned for a scheme of this
type because its pandemic preparedness plan did not foresee an
event of such gravity. In responding to the pandemic, the
Department was able to draw on some of the planning from its
experience during the UK’s exit from the EU. Carrying lessons
forward to future schemes, however, is hindered by the
Department’s lack of corporate memory, with staff moving to
other roles. The Department is shortly due to publish the
findings of its first of three evaluations of the Scheme, as
part of its three-year Scheme evaluation programme, but it has
not shared any plans about how it would disseminate the
lessons-learned across government.
Recommendation: The Department and the Bank should
establish a strategy on how it intends to share lessons from the
scheme within a month of the publication of their first
evaluation report. The Bank should develop a business
case for an emergency loan scheme for future crisis within 6
months of publication of this report.