ChatterBank3 mins ago
On What Does The Eu Spend €58 Billion Each Year?
If you are interested, have a listen to the latest edition of ‘The Now Show’
The complete programme is worth a listen – but if you are only interested in this, Rich Pappiatt starts at about 8 ½ minutes in.
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ program mes/b08 lk546
Although a satirical radio show, it is a very serious topic.
Although the UK government has said that the subsidies will continue post Brexit – it won’t be long before the government (and the general population) realise that they get nothing for this yearly €3 billion spend.
The complete programme is worth a listen – but if you are only interested in this, Rich Pappiatt starts at about 8 ½ minutes in.
http://
Although a satirical radio show, it is a very serious topic.
Although the UK government has said that the subsidies will continue post Brexit – it won’t be long before the government (and the general population) realise that they get nothing for this yearly €3 billion spend.
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No best answer has yet been selected by Hymie. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.TTT, your link says, "According to the annual report of the European Court of Auditors, seen by The Telegraph, £5.5 billion of the EU budget last year was misspent because of controls on spending that were deemed to be only “partially effective” by experts.
The audit, published this morning, found that £109 billion out of a total of £117 billion spent by the EU in 2013 was "affected by material error”. Not the £100 billion that some may have thought, reading only the headline.
The audit, published this morning, found that £109 billion out of a total of £117 billion spent by the EU in 2013 was "affected by material error”. Not the £100 billion that some may have thought, reading only the headline.
//Would that be the National Audit Office then, tonyav? If so, how is that different to the way the EU is audited?//
I would imagine the main difference to be that someone gets banged up if proven to have lied and submitted false accounts........ rather than getting a lifetime pension and rewards for all their immediate family and "friends". One man's cynic is another man's realist.
I would imagine the main difference to be that someone gets banged up if proven to have lied and submitted false accounts........ rather than getting a lifetime pension and rewards for all their immediate family and "friends". One man's cynic is another man's realist.
//The audit, published this morning, found that £109 billion out of a total of £117 billion spent by the EU in 2013 was "affected by material error”.//
I take that to mean that the other £8 billion is missing entirely, because every penny they spend is "affected by material error", and subject to bribery and corrupt practice.
I take that to mean that the other £8 billion is missing entirely, because every penny they spend is "affected by material error", and subject to bribery and corrupt practice.
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