Celebrity cutouts and £1,200 coffee pods bought on taxpayer funded credit cards
Thousands of pounds of taxpayers’ cash has been splurged by civil servants on bizarre items including celebrity cutouts and DJ equipment, it’s been revealed.
So-called Government Procurement Cards (GPCs) are used to cover costs by staff in several departments.
Currently, the maximum spend on hospitality using the cards – typically used by diplomats and people in trade roles – is £2,500.
But almost all of the 20,000 cards are due to be frozen this week, and the maximum spend slashed, as the government tries to cut down on ‘wasteful spending’.
It comes after it was revealed the Foreign Office used the system to pay for £2,493 of shoes at a fashionable shop in Barbados and £2,479 at online shop DJ Superstore.
Staff at the department also spent £673 on a website that sells cardboard cutouts of celebrities such as Harry Styles and the Spice Girls, the Mail reported.
Between July and October last year, the Foreign Office bought £49,511 worth of beer, wine and spirits at venues across the world.
At the Cabinet Office, staff spent £742 on Nespresso coffee pods last November and £531 the month before.
Yesterday, the government announced almost all GPCs will be frozen this week and cardholders will be asked to reapply and justify they actually need them.
The Cabinet Office said the move was expected to cut the number of cards in circulation by around half.
Meanwhile, the maximum spend will be cut from £2,500 to £500 – and any spending above that will require approval.
Cabinet Office minister Pat Mcfadden said the move would ‘ensure taxpayers’ money is spent on improving the lives of working people’.
He added: ‘It’s not right that hundreds of millions of pounds are spent on government credit cards each year, without high levels of scrutiny or challenge. Only officials for whom it is absolutely essential should have a card.
‘Our clampdown on government credit cards will deliver savings that can be used to drive our Plan for Change – securing our borders, getting the NHS back on its feet and rebuilding Britain.’
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