Queen Elizabeth's cash
crisis: Monarch 'down to last million'
Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain is apparently one royal
who is no longer flush.
According to The Daily
Telegraph, a report by the House of Commons' Public Accounts
Committee has found that the Queen's financial reserves have reached a
"historic low," dwindling to 1 million pounds ($1.66 million) from 35
million pounds ($58 million) in 2001.
The Committee's report has placed the blame squarely on the
Queen's advisers for overspending in a manner out of line with the austerity
measures that have been adopted by Prime Minister David Cameron's government.
According to the Telegraph, the royal household only managed 5 percent
efficiency savings over the past five years, while some British government
departments have cut their budgets by up to 33 percent.
In the 2012-13
fiscal year, the report found that the royal household received 31 million
pounds ($51.4 million) in taxpayer funds, but spent 33.3 million ($55.2
million), dipping into the reserves in the process.
Margaret Hodge, a Labour MP who chaired the committee, told
Sky News that the financial mismanagement has resulted in two of the Queen's most
famous residences falling into disrepair, with no contingency plant to pay for
the backlog of repairs.
"Forty percent of [the royal estate] needs something
doing to it," Hodge said. "The boilers at Buckingham Palace haven't
been replaced for 60 years. Windsor Castle has problems with the bedrooms and
the Royal Picture Gallery has buckets to catch the water coming through."
Hodge also called on the Treasury to "be actively
involved in reviewing the Household's financial planning and management,"
which she claimed it has failed to do.
A Buckingham Palace spokesman the Telegraph that repairing
the royal palaces was "a significant financial priority" and claimed
that the royal household had doubled its income since 2007.
Credits: The Daily Telegraph
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