The Borneo Post

UK tells firms to pay into virus furlough scheme from August

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LONDON: Britain on Friday announced companies must start paying towards the wages of staff furloughed during the coronaviru­s pandemic from August, while self-employed workers will be eligible for a second and final grant.

Finance Minister Rishi Sunak said employers will need to pay social security contributi­ons from August, 10 per cent of wages in September and 20 per cent in October, before the government’s furlough scheme ends.

Launched in March, it allows employees to receive 80 per cent of their pay up to £2,500 (US$3,100, 2,800 euros) a month and was extended until October earlier this month.

In addition, Sunak said the self-employment income support scheme will continue into August, when freelancer­s can apply for a second grant of up to £6,570.

The scheme, which pays three months’ worth of average monthly profits, has so far seen 2.3 million claims worth £6.8 billion (7.5 billion euros, US$8.4 billion).

Individual­s could claim up to £7,500 under the first grant, which launched earlier this month.

The changes come as the government eases the country’s virus lockdown introduced in late March, with people being urged back to work earlier this month, and some schools and shops set to reopen next week.

“As Britain returns to work, we need to adapt the emergency programmes we put in place to bridge through the crisis,” Sunak said as he unveiled the reforms at the daily Downing Street briefing.

“There is broad consensus across the political and economic spectrum: the furlough scheme cannot continue indefinite­ly.”

Sunak also announced that firms would be allowed to return workers part-time from July without risk of losing out financiall­y, rather than August as had initially suggested.

He added the “new, more flexible furlough” was a key part of the government’s plan to “kickstart the economy”.

Some 8.4 million workers at around one million companies in Britain have benefitted from the scheme, so far costing the government £15 billion. — AFP

 ??  ?? People walk past closed shops on Oxford Street in central London’s main high street retail shopping area ahead of some shops reopening from their Covid-19 shutdown from next week. — AFP photo
People walk past closed shops on Oxford Street in central London’s main high street retail shopping area ahead of some shops reopening from their Covid-19 shutdown from next week. — AFP photo

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