Consultants are reportedly being paid around £7,000 a day by the Government to help with its coronavirus test and trace system.
Boston Consulting Group (BCG) was paid about £10 million for around 40 consultants to provide four months’ work between the end of April and late August, according to documents seen by Sky News.
The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) reportedly received a 10 to 15% discount from BCG, whose day rates for public sector work range from £2,400 to £7,360 for the most senior consultants.
The report comes amid ongoing criticism of the Government’s £12 billion test and trace system.
The DHSC said efforts to set up NHS Test and Trace required it to work with public and private sector partners, with ‘every pound spent’ going towards keeping people safe and ramping up testing capacity.
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But Labour’s shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth said the figures being spent on ‘this broken system are truly shocking’.
He added: ‘Testing and contact tracing is failing to keep the virus under control, which makes it even more disgraceful that such huge sums of money are being spent on something that isn’t fit for purpose.’
Mr Ashworth reiterated Labour’s call for a ‘short circuit-break’ lockdown to ‘fix the failing test and trace system and to ultimately save lives’.
Major companies such as Deloitte, PwC and BCG have been working on the Government’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic, managing the track and trace system, the purchase of personal protective equipment (PPE) and the search to produce working ventilators.
Last week it emerged that more than a thousand consultants from Deloitte were reportedly working on the NHS Test and Trace programme, on day rates of as much as £2,360.
Documents reportedly showed the Government had since hired more private sector consultants to work on its Moonshot mass testing programme.
Some 165 consultants were recruited to work on the scheme between now and November, Sky News said.
This includes 84 more from Deloitte, 31 from EY and 50 from KPMG, with a further 42 roles potentially available for consultants.
Tamzen Isacsson, chief executive of the Management Consultancies Association (MCA), said: ‘We should remember that Government is dealing with an unprecedented volume of workload and major upheaval due to Covid-19 and using external resources has enabled them to work quickly and with intensity in many areas.’
A DHSC spokesperson said: ‘NHS Test and Trace is the biggest testing system per head of population of all the major countries in Europe.
‘It’s processing 270,000 tests a day and nearly 700,000 people who may otherwise have unknowingly been at risk of spreading coronavirus have been contacted.
‘To build the largest diagnostic network in British history, it requires us to work with both public and private sector partners with the specialist skills and experience we need.
‘Every pound spent is contributing towards our efforts to keep people safe as we ramp up testing capacity to 500,000 tests a day by the end of October.’
BCG declined to comment.
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