Scottish Daily Mail

Bosses warn Rishi bonuses won’t save jobs

- by Lucy White

BUsINess leaders have warned that the Chancellor’s job retention bonuses will not stop them from laying off staff.

rishi sunak is offering employers a £1,000 grant for every furloughed employee they keep on when the job retention scheme winds down at the end of October.

But fewer than one in five business leaders who have furloughed staff say these payouts will actually help them keep hold of their workers, according to a poll carried out by the Institute of Directors.

and just 3pc said they will have a ‘substantia­l effect’ on their ability to retain workers.

With the Treasury considerin­g plans to raise corporatio­n tax from 19pc to 24pc to help pay for the Covid crisis, the IoD described the job retention bonus as a ‘sticking plaster’ and urged sunak to cut taxes including employer’s national insurance contributi­ons to prevent a ‘surge in unemployme­nt’.

an audit by the Mail has revealed that top British firms have already announced plans to lay off more than a quarter of a million workers since the Covid crisis began.

But the threat of more layoffs increases from today when employers will be forced to contribute to the wages of furloughed staff for the first time.

The Government will reduce its contributi­on to 70pc of wages up to £2,500 per month, down from 80pc.

Firms will have to top up salaries to 80pc, and continue to pay national insurance contributi­ons and pension contributi­ons. Just over half the 730 business directors who took part in the IoD’s poll said they were confident about being able to start contributi­ng to the wages of furloughed staff. But 28pc said that they were pessimisti­c about being able to meet these additional costs.

Tej Parikh, chief economist at the IoD, said: ‘as the furlough scheme winds down, job losses are starting to mount. The job retention bonus is just a sticking plaster, and is unlikely to give many businesses the support needed to retain staff.’

The IoD’s hard-hitting interventi­on came as accountanc­y giant KPMG warned that the UK economy is unlikely to recover until early 2023 as it slashed its growth forecasts.

It now expects the economy to shrink by 10.3pc this year, compared with the 7.2pc fall it predicted in June.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom