The Queen Cost British Taxpayer £200,000 More Over Last Financial Year

Queen's Cost To Taxpayer Rises By £200,000 Over Last Year

The cost to the taxpayer of supporting the monarchy rose marginally during the last financial year, Buckingham Palace accounts showed today.

The Queen's official expenditure increased by £200,000 (0.6%) from £32.1 million in 2010/11 to £32.3 million in 2011/12, according to the royal public finances annual report.

Civil List funding, much of it used to pay the wages of her Royal Household staff, fell by £100,000 from £13.7 million to £13.6 million.

Buckingham Palace accounts show the Queen's official expenditure rose by 0.6% - an extra £200,000

The Government also provides money, known as grants-in-aid, to cover the areas of royal travel, property services and communications and information.

The taxpayer funds used to pay for official air and rail travel at home and abroad for members of the Royal Family increased by £100,000 from £6 million in 2010/11 to £6.1 million in 2011/12.

There was also an increase in spending on property services - money used for the upkeep of royal residences and other buildings - from £11.9 million to £12.2 million.

But the cost of running the Buckingham Palace press office, maintaining the official website and providing information to the public fell from £500,000 to £400,000.

Sir Alan Reid, Keeper of the Privy Purse, said: "When the Chancellor of the Exchequer announced his plans for the public expenditure to reduce by 25% in real terms over a four-year period, the Queen was very keen that the Royal Household should play its part in reducing its expenditure accordingly.

"We are pleased to report that we have achieved this reduction a year ahead of the public expenditure target and managed to transfer £3.3 million to the Sovereign Grant reserve.

"The decrease in expenditure is due mainly to the continuation of a pay freeze, increased income generation, and the deferral of property maintenance expenditure.

"Expenditure during this Diamond Jubilee year will require the use of reserves as the first year of the Sovereign Grant provides for funding of only £31 million."

Royal finances are in a transitional phase as the old system is phased out and a new Sovereign Grant funding model is introduced.

It will replace money from the Civil List, Government funds which cover the official expenses of the Queen and her household, and grants-in-aid.

Under the new grant, the Queen will receive 15% of the profits from the £6.7 billion Crown Estate.

The grant for the 2012/13 financial year has already been set at £31 million but for 2013/14, when the new formula begins, it is estimated to be worth £36 million.

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