Toronto Star

Trudeau issues plea to business,

Canada Revenue Agency data shows slow uptake on federal wage subsidy

- ALEX BALLINGALL

OTTAWA— Please. That was Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s message to businesses Tuesday. The federal government has doubled the length of time it is willing to subsidize up to 75 per cent of their wage costs. Now, Trudeau said, businesses should hire back workers for when COVID-19 health restrictio­ns are lifted.

“To employers looking to start up again, please rehire your workers. Use the wage subsidy for their paycheque. That’s what it’s there for,” Trudeau said.

The prime minister’s plea comes days after The Canadian Press revealed Air Canada plans to lay off at least half of its 38,000 employees on June 7. The company had previously announced it would hire back 16,500 workers laid off in March under the federal government’s wage subsidy, and the union representi­ng the airliner’s employees told the Star it wants the company to keep using the subsidy — now available until Aug. 29 — as negotiatio­ns continue about the layoff plan.

In an emailed response to questions from the Star, Air Canada spokespers­on Peter Fitzpatric­k said the company plans to keep using the subsidy for employees, but that “unfortunat­ely, the impact of COVID-19 on the airline industry globally is such that even when the economy does reopen, we do not anticipate our business will return to normal any time soon.”

The government has touted the wage subsidy as one of its marquee aid programs for the pandemic crisis, designed to keep workers on company payrolls. But data published by the Canada Revenue Agency suggests it has been used less than expected.

Less than $3.4 billion of the program’s original $73-billion budget — meant to cover up to $847 per week, per employee for the first half of the program’s lifespan, from March 15 to June 6 — was paid out as of May 11, two weeks after applicatio­ns for the program opened. That money is supporting wages for almost 1.7 million workers, according to the government data.

By contrast, almost eight million people applied for the Canada Emergency Response Benefit, a $2,000 payout for people who lose work during the pandemic, costing the government more than $35 billion as of May 11.

Dan Kelly, president and chief executive officer of the Canadian Federation of Independen­t Business, said more companies would already be on board with the subsidy if the government didn’t take so long to create it. The program was promised almost a month before applicatio­ns opened online April 27. Almost two million Canadians lost their jobs in April after about one million jobs were lost in March, according to Statistics Canada.

“I firmly believe that had this been announced near the start of the crisis … many employers would have delayed some of the rounds of layoffs that they were otherwise forced to do, and as a result kept more people on their payroll,” Kelly said.

Another factor in the slow uptake of the wage subsidy might be that companies hardest hit by the pandemic downturn don’t plan to return with the same workforce when restrictio­ns are lifted, said Perrin Beatty, president and chief executive officer of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce. Some sectors, such as aviation and hospitalit­y, might not see the return of pre-pandemic activity for a long time, as internatio­nal travel restrictio­ns and social distancing guidelines are likely to remain in force until effective treatments are found for COVID-19, Beatty said.

Business will be slower and some companies simply won’t need as many workers as before the pandemic, even if the government offers to pay most of their wages, he said. “The economic damage has been sufficient­ly severe that the business is not going to look like it did back in February,” Beatty said.

Less than $3.4 billion of federal program’s original $73-billion budget was paid out as of May 11

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