Home Office procurement card spend over £500: 2014
Details of all GPC transactions of £500 and over for 2014.
Documents
Details
This is intended to help you understand and interpret the data published by the Home Office, its agencies and NDPBs.
Background information
The government procurement card is a branded purchasing card, not a credit card.
It is provided through a framework agreement between Government Procurement Services (the national procurement partner for UK Public Services) and 6 card issuers. Barclaycard is the card issuer for Home Office.
GPC is an efficient solution specifically for low risk, low value purchases and enables government to buy from small and medium sized enterprises.
GPC key benefits:
What are the benefits of GPC?
- access to data to help monitor spend and budgets more effectively
- reducing the number of invoices: card transactions are consolidated and paid centrally, with no risk of interest charges
- saves money and delivers efficient processes
- electronic cardholder statements, supporting sustainability by reducing paper and resultant waste
What are the benefits of GPC to SMEs?
- prompt payments in line with government initiatives
- improved cash flow
- reduces bad debt and late payments
- reduced administrative costs
GPC policy and procedures:
Use of the GPC is governed by the Home Office Government Procurement Card Policy that is derived from the Central Government Procurement Card Policy.
NB: GPC is not permitted to purchase alternative goods or services which are available on Home Office contracts.
GPC transparency
In support of the government’s transparency agenda, the Home Office are publishing details of all transactions of £500 and over. The data published will include the:
- transaction posting date
- reference number
- merchant name and
- transaction amount
- data is published monthly, 2 months in arrears
Updates to this page
Published 16 April 2014Last updated 5 June 2015 + show all updates
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Data up to December 2014 published.
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Data up to October 2014 published.
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August 2014 data published
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July 2014 data published.
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March and April 2014 data published.
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February 2014 data added.
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First published.