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UK unveils Us$2.5bil plan to pay young workers

Sunak makes protecting jobs his priority

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LONDON: Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak will unveil a £2bil (Us$2.5bil) programme to pay the wages of more than 200,000 young workers as he tries to pull the UK economy out of the deepest slump in centuries.

It would be the centerpiec­e of the government’s three-point plan to protect, support and create jobs, the Treasury said in a statement late on Tuesday.

“Young people bear the brunt of most economic crises, but they are at particular risk this time because they work in the sectors disproport­ionately hit by the pandemic,” Sunak said.

“We also know that youth unemployme­nt has a long-term impact on jobs and wages and we don’t want to see that happen to this generation.”

With the UK immersed in possibly its deepest recession in 300 years, the chancellor will set out a package of measures to help the economy recover from more than three months of lockdown.

While Sunak has made protecting jobs the core of his plan, he has repeatedly conceded he won’t be able to protect every role as he unwinds the unpreceden­ted government aid that is funding the wages of more than 12 million workers.

Sunak will also announce a stamp duty holiday for homes costing up to 500,000 pounds in an effort to revive the housing market, according to The Sun newspaper, while the Financial Times has reported he is considerin­g a temporary cut to value added tax to boost the hospitalit­y industry.

“We do not comment on speculatio­n about tax changes,” the Treasury said in a statement.

The chancellor plans to conduct a wider spending review and outline a further package of stimulus measures in the fall.

Over the past week, the Treasury has outlined more than £4bil of measures to promote jobs, skills and energy efficiency. They include:

In addition, Prime Minister Boris Johnson has brought forward £5bil of infrastruc­ture spending on schools, hospitals and roads, pledging the UK will “build, build, build” to emerge from the crisis.

The government also outlined a £1.6bil bailout earlier this week to help struggling theaters and music venues, which have yet to be allowed to reopen.

Meanwhile, jobless claims have more than doubled to almost three million and economists say the unemployme­nt rate could reach double figures from 3.9% currently.

Those prediction­s are informing Sunak’s decisions as he tries to preserve jobs.

The impact of the outbreak on the economy so far has been stark: Economic output shrank a record 20.4% in April, and the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity estimates Sunak’s efforts to support businesses and workers through the crisis will cost more than £130bil.

They have already pushed the national debt above the size of the country’s gross domestic product for the first time since the 1960s.

The measures to be outlined were billed by the Treasury as the biggest package to tackle youth unemployme­nt in decades.

Under the so-called Kickstart Scheme, the government will pay the wages of 16 to 24 year-olds who are claiming benefits while they undertake six-month placements.

The state will pay the workers at the level of the national minimum wage for 25 hours a week, with employers able to top them up.

The programme will open for applicatio­ns next month, with the first placements starting in the fall, according to the Treasury.

It’s due to run until December 2021, with the option to extend it.

The Resolution Foundation, a Londonbase­d think tank, welcomed the measure, saying it could help around 350,000 young people into work –but stressed it needs to be delivered quickly to be effective.

Meanwhile, the Trades Union Congress said it was a “good first step” to prevent a spike in youth unemployme­nt.

“We also know that youth unemployme­nt has a long-term impact on jobs and wages.” Rishi Sunak

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