How the UK swipes back tens of millions in aid cash every month in tax

The U.K. government has been accused of quietly pocketing tens of millions of pounds meant for international development every month through an “accounting sleight of hand.”

Ministers have acknowledged levying Value Added Tax, or VAT, on payments for housing approximately 50,000 asylum seekers in emergency accommodation within U.K. borders — a cost taken, controversially, from the much-reduced aid budget.

Rishi Sunak has put that cost at £6 million ($7.55 million) a day, which means — with VAT charged at 20% — tens of millions of pounds are flowing back to the Treasury from Overseas Development Assistance, or ODA, each month.

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