The taxpayer is facing a £50m bill for the collapse of electrical retailer Comet, a report from the administrator is set to reveal.
The report from Deloitte is likely to indicate that insufficient funds have been raised from the winding down of the chain to pay up to £24m in redundancy payments to 6,000 staff.
This means the Government will probably have to step in and ensure workers receive their payments.
The statement is expected to be published today and will also disclose that unsecured creditors - including HM Revenue and Customs - will receive nothing.
The Tax Office is due some £26.1m by the firm.
Secured creditors, such as the backers of Comet's parent company Hailey Acquisitions, will get payments of just under £50m.
But according to the Sunday Telegraph, this represented a shortfall of £95m on the amount owed at the time of the collapse of the 236 store chain in early November.
The troubled Comet chain reportedly racking up losses of £95m in the year to April, followed by a further £31m in the subsequent five months as credit insurers lost confidence and withdrew support for the business.
Hailey Acquisitions was the investment vehicle put together by Henry Jackson of OpCapita, who raised the funding from unnamed investors for Comet's takeover from French retail group Darty.
Deloitte has said the last 50 stores will close for the final time tomorrow, amid speculation that the brand will be sold to an online retailer and around 20 shops picked up by rivals.
Unsecured creditors also included ITV and Google, which are owed £1.2m and £602,000 respectively for unpaid advertising bills, the newspaper said.
Meanwhile, holders of £4.7m of unclaimed Comet gift cards and vouchers are also on the list of unsecured creditors.
However, an estimated £40m of payments will be made to suppliers and £2.1m of holiday and back pay owed to staff will be paid in full.
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