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The report will be unpleasant reading to policymakers in the 17-country eurozone who have been hoping to draw up a similar program to boosting lending. The European Central Bank is currently reviewing ways to increase lending to small- and medium-sized companies. Critics and union leaders in Britain argued Funding for Lending wasn't necessarily the best way to use the money. "The Funding for Lending scheme is not providing the support small businesses need in these tough economic times,"said Frances O'Grady, the general secretary of the union federation, the TUC. "It seems that some banks are just using the Funding for Lending to improve their capital position." The 40 participating lenders have drawn 16.5 billion pounds from the plan. Lloyds, which is partly owned by the British taxpayer, loaned 1 billion pounds less during the quarter
-- though it borrowed 3 billion pounds from the plan. Lloyds said these figures didn't tell the whole story, arguing that it had increased lending to small- and medium-sized business by 4 percent a year on a net basis. It also said the overall decline in net lending, including non-core, was less than the previous quarter. Royal Bank of Scotland, which is majority owned by the British taxpayer after it was rescued by the government in 2008, cut back its net lending by 1.6 billion in the quarter, but has borrowed 750 million pounds.
[Associated
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