Missing traders cream off £181m from Customs

29 Jan 04
The government is the major victim of fraud in the UK, new figures reveal.

30 January 2004

The government is the major victim of fraud in the UK, new figures reveal.

Big-scale VAT scams contributed to tricking the government out of more than £181m in 2003, consultancy KPMG claims in its annual fraud barometer survey.

Fraud against the government accounted for almost half of the total amount committed in the UK last year – £374m.

However, the scale could be even greater, as only one in ten cases is detected. KPMG's barometer counts only frauds that have led to prosecution and total more than £100,000.

The £181m figure was fuelled by 'carousel' or 'missing trader' frauds. In their simplest form, these involve somebody importing goods from a zero-rated VAT source, selling the goods with VAT included and then disappearing without passing the VAT on to Customs & Excise.

Such frauds are usually committed by professional criminal gangs.

But this year's figure represents a kind of victory for Customs & Excise. In 2002 more than £300m of carousel frauds were detected.

'This is good news for the government and specifically Customs & Excise,' said David Alexander, a fraud investigation partner with KPMG Forensic.

Four years ago, the government set up a task force to clamp down on VAT crimes and Customs said that this type of fraud was now in decline.

PFjan2004

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