Western Morning News

Chancellor unveils £30bn in support – but ‘hardship lies ahead’

- DAVID HUGHES Press Associatio­n

FIRMS which have furloughed staff will be given a £1,000 bonus to keep workers in jobs, diners will get a discount to support pubs and restaurant­s, and stamp duty is to be cut under plans to protect the economy from the coronaviru­s recession.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak said the jobs retention bonus could cost up to £9 billion if all furloughed workers are retained.

He unveiled the measure as part of an emergency package of support to help keep people in work as the coronaviru­s economic crisis hits.

He warned that “hardship lies ahead”, but insisted that no-one will be left “without hope”.

Unveiling announceme­nts in a “plan for jobs” which could cost up to £30 billion, Mr Sunak also:

Confirmed plans to abolish stamp duty on properties up to £500,000 in England and Northern Ireland under a temporary measure lasting until March 31 2021.

Announced an “eat out to help out” plan for dining out in August to boost the hospitalit­y sector, with a 50% discount per head from Monday to Wednesday up to a maximum discount of £10 per diner.

Slashed VAT on food, accommodat­ion and attraction­s from 20% to 5% from July 15 until January 12, a tax cut worth up to £4 billion.

Set out a scheme for firms to be given £2,000 for each new apprentice they hire under the age of 25 and a new bonus of £1,500 for apprentice­s over that age.

The furlough scheme winds down in October, and Mr Sunak is acting in an attempt to avoid widespread redundanci­es as state support is withdrawn.

“While we can’t protect every job, one of the most important things we can do to prevent unemployme­nt is to get as many people as possible from furlough back to their jobs,” he said.

Under the Jobs Retention Bonus, firms will be paid £1,000 for each employee they bring back from furlough and continuous­ly employ through to January on an average of at least £520 a month.

“We’ll pay the bonus for all furloughed employees,” he said.

“So if employers bring back all nine million people who have been on furlough, this would be a £9 billion policy to retain people in work.

“Our message to business is clear: if you stand by your workers, we will stand by you.” The Chancellor, in what amounted to a mini-Budget, told MPs that the Government will do “all we can” to keep people in work.

Addressing MPs, Mr Sunak said his plan would help protect livelihood­s after the economy contracted by 25% in just two months.

He said: “We have taken decisive action to protect our economy.

“But people are anxious about losing their jobs, about unemployme­nt rising. We’re not just going to accept this.

“People need to know we will do all we can to give everyone the opportunit­y of good and secure work.

“People need to know that although hardship lies ahead, no-one will be left without hope.”

Other measures announced by Mr Sunak include:

A £2 billion scheme of taxpayerfu­nded work placements for 16 to 24-year-olds on Universal Credit and at risk of long-term unemployme­nt.

A £3 billion green package, with grants for home-owners and public buildings to improve energy efficiency.

A £111 million programme of unpaid traineeshi­ps combining work experience with training.

The Chancellor’s statement comes after warnings from the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD) that the UK’s unemployme­nt rate could soar to 14.8%, with job losses comparable to the 1930s. Mr Sunak said the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity and Bank of England are both projecting “significan­t job losses”.

That was “the most urgent challenge we now face” but “I will never accept unemployme­nt as an unavoidabl­e outcome”, Mr Sunak said.

Shadow chancellor Anneliese Dodds welcomed the support for the economy but stressed that more needs to be done to control the virus.

CBI director-general Dame Carolyn Fairbairn said more immediate support for firms is required.

Our message to business is clear: if you stand by your workers, we will stand by you

RISHI SUNAK

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