Over $200bn potentially stolen from US Covid relief programmes, watchdog says
Over $200bn potentially stolen from US Covid relief programmes, watchdog says
New York: Over $200 billion from the US government’s Covid-19 relief programmes were potentially stolen, a federal watchdog said on Tuesday, adding that the US Small Business Administration (SBA) had weakened its controls in a rush to disburse the funds. At least 17 per cent of all funds related to the government’s coronavirus Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) and Paycheck Protection Programme (PPP) schemes were disbursed to potentially fraudulent actors, according to a report released Tuesday by the SBA’s office of inspector general.
Over the course of the pandemic, the SBA disbursed about $1.2 trillion of EIDL and PPP funds.
The SBA disputed the more than $200bn figure put forward by the watchdog and said the inspector general’s approach had significantly overestimated fraud.
The agency said its experts put the potential fraud estimate at $36bn and added that over 86pc of that likely fraud took place in 2020, when the administration for former President Donald Trump was in office. President Joe Biden took office in January 2021.
The fraud estimate put forward by the inspector general for the EIDL programme stood at more than $136bn while the PPP fraud estimate was $64 billion.
Similar stories
Comments are closed.