Imagine
how ordinary Brits feel about this one!
Inflation-busting
22% 'pay-rise' for the Queen branded 'immoral' by campaigners after
'rainy day' fund is reduced to 'last £1 million'
Queen's
'rainy day' bank account is down to its last one million pounds,
leaving her vulnerable to ‘unexpected costs’ claims National
Audit Office
1
October, 2013
With
an estimated wealth of £350m the Queen is not hard-up by anyone's
measure.
According
to figures in a National Audit Report yesterday, however, her 'rainy
day' bank account is apparently down to its last one million pounds,
leaving her vulnerable to ‘unexpected costs’.
Details
of the Queen's finances emerged after the National Audit Office was
allowed, for the first time, to examine all aspects of the Queen’s
funding.
According
to the report the Head-of-State is also set to receive an
inflation-busting 22 per cent ‘pay rise’ over two years, raising
the amount allocated to run her household and conduct official
engagements to £37.9 million up from £31 million.
Despite
freezing pay for all her staff earning over £50,000, the Queen paid
out £19.5million in wages to her 436 staff last year. The average
salary paid being £44,724-a-year.
The
report says that the recommended increase in the grant is in the
context of ‘significant reductions’ in the monarchy’s funding
over the last 20 years. Grants for royal travel have been cut by 76%
and the cost of maintenance for royal palaces was reduced by 60 per
cent.
However,
the decision to increase the funding allocated to the Queen was
condemned by campaigners who branded it "immoral".
Graham
Smith of the group, Republic, said: "We said from the start that
the sovereign support grant was a bad deal for the taxpayers and no
way to fund a public institution. Clearly we were right."
"While
almost every other public body is facing serious cuts, it is quite
simply immoral that our head of state is handed millions more in
public money."
"The
office of the head of state should be funded like every other public
body - through a budget agreed by Parliament and based on need."
"The
royals have got to be told: enough is enough.
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