Cost of the Queen: $1 per person annually

Like millions of her subjects, Queen Elizabeth II is going to have to make do and mend — cutting spending and putting off palace repairs as royal finances are squeezed by Britain’s budget crisis.

Accounts published on Monday by the Buckingham Palace reveal the total public cost of supporting the monarchy was ÂŁ38.2 million ($57.8 million) in the year to March 31, the equivalent of 62 pence (94 cents) per person. The total is more than ÂŁ3 million less than in 2008-2009.
Britain’s public sector is facing cuts as the government tries to eliminate a record deficit, and Mr Alan Reid, the Keeper of the Privy Purse, said the royal household “is acutely aware of the difficult economic climate” and will be cutting costs and putting off essential maintenance.
The queen receives ÂŁ7.9 million of public money each year to pay for staff and other costs, an amount that has not risen in 20 years. The accounts show she topped that up by drawing an extra ÂŁ6.5 million from a reserve fund built up over the years by saving portions of her allocated budget.
If the queen continues to use money from her reserve at the current rate, the fund will run out by 2012 — the year she celebrates her 60th year on the throne.
She had been expected to ask for an increase in basic funding this year, but the government — which is bringing in deep cuts to welfare payments and spending programmes — imposed a freeze until at least next year.
The accounts show the government spent more than ÂŁ15 million on the upkeep of royal residences including Buckingham Palace and Windsor Castle, and almost ÂŁ4 million on royal travel. Both amounts were down from the previous year.
Mr Reid said the royal household would be cutting its property services budget by £500,000 million, “implementing a head count freeze and reviewing every vacancy to see if we can avoid replacement.”
The Keeper of the Privy Purse said “the necessary cuts in public expenditure will have an impact on the backlog of essential maintenance which it is hoped can be addressed in the longer term.”
“In the meantime, the household is continuing to pursue opportunities to reduce costs and generate income from the estate’s assets, including commercial lettings and management charges,” Mr Reid added. — AP

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