Press Association

Press Association

Homepage

 
Figures show the DWP alone has spent £156m on aborted programmes

£200m 'wasted' on botched IT plans

Government departments have "wasted" more than £200 million on IT projects that were later abandoned, research by the Conservatives has found.

The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) alone has spent £156m on aborted programmes, official figures show.

That included £143m invested in a benefits processing project that was scrapped, although ministers insist £73m of that has still been of value to the DWP.

The figures, from the past five years, were obtained by shadow chief secretary to the Treasury Philip Hammond via a series of Parliamentary questions.

He said they were proof of Prime Minister Gordon Brown's "casual" use of public money.

"Families struggling to make ends meet and facing the uncertainties of recession will be outraged to learn that millions of pounds of their money have been wasted on these botched IT programmes. This is yet more evidence of Gordon Brown's casual attitude to taxpayers' money."

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) has got rid of three major IT programmes before they were completed, costing a total of £26m.

They included the £12.6m pilot of a data and records management system, which was subsequently ditched, a £9.7m customer information programme and a £4m project for handling licences for protected species.

The Department for Transport has spent £9m on cancelled programmes, comprising mainly a £7.9m DVLA vehicle-tracking system.

In addition, £5m has been spent by the Cabinet Office, £4m by the Ministry of Justice and £1m by the Department for Communities and Local Government on abandoned IT programmes.

Press Association news

  • Britain 'immune' from gas shortages

    Britain will be immune from any gas shortages caused by the row between Russia and Ukraine, the Government has said
    Britain will be immune from any gas shortages caused by the row between Russia and Ukraine, the Government has said.
  • Middle East faces 'darkest moment'

    Palestinians inspect the rubble of a desroyed Rafah refugee camp after Israeli strikes in Gaza
    Gordon Brown has warned that the Middle East is facing its "darkest moment yet" amid more bloodshed in Gaza - but expressed hope that a deal could be struck for an immediate ceasefire.
  • Baby dies in hospital bug outbreak

    One baby has died and six others are in an isolation ward at Heartlands Hospital after bug outbreak at a neo-natal unit
    One baby has died and six others are being treated in an isolation ward after a bug hit a hospital's neo-natal unit.