civil list
In the UK, the annual sum provided from public funds to meet the official expenses of the sovereign and immediate dependents; private expenses are met by the privy purse.
| In the USA there is no equivalent of the civil list, but presidents and vice-presidents have salaries and allowances for expenses. |
| Provision is also made for their widows, and ex-presidents are pensioned and have free office space, with free post and allowances for staff. |
History Before 1689 all expenses of government in peacetime and of the royal household were supposed to be met from the hereditary revenues of the Crown and from taxes voted for life to the sovereign on accession. When necessary other revenue was raised through additional taxes granted by Parliament |
| In 1689 Parliament attempted to secure some control over expenditure, and thus over the monarch by voting an annual sum of £600,000, made up of the hereditary revenues and part of the excise duty. This was raised to £700,000 and given statutory effect by the Civil List Act 1697. This sum was intended to meet the expenses of civil government (the civil service and pensions paid by the state) and the expenses of the royal household, but did not cover the cost of the army and navy, nor debt charges. |
| On the accession of George III in 1760 an important change occurred when the hereditary revenues and such tax yields as Parliament decided were no longer paid to the monarch, but to the exchequer account (known as the consolidated fund) and the civil list was paid out of the consolidated fund. Finally, on the accession of William IV in 1830 all government expenses were removed from the civil list and it was restricted to the expenses of the royal household. |
| The revenues of the Duchies of Lancaster and Cornwall are not included in the hereditary revenues surrendered to the consolidated fund, but are retained by the Queen and the Prince of Wales (who holds the title of Duke of Cornwall) respectively. |