Bangkok Post

Aust extends wage subsidy scheme

- COLIN PACKHAM

SYDNEY: Australia will spend A$16.8 billion (US$11.8 billion) to extend its wage subsidies for businesses hit by the coronaviru­s pandemic, as a surge in new infections in the country’s southeast threatens to keep the economy in recession.

The six-month extension of the programme allays fears a hard end to the current A$70 billion scheme, originally scheduled for Sept 30, that would prolong Australia’s first recession in three decades.

However, subsidies will be reduced under the new programme, which runs through to March 28, 2021 and is expected to cover about one million workers, as Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s conservati­ve government seeks to wean the economy of fiscal support.

“It has to scale down and work ourselves off these supports because they’re not enduring, they cannot be permanent, they were never designed to be permanent,” Morrison told reporters in Canberra yesterday.

Australia launched its support programme in March with fortnightl­y payments for workers from affected businesses of A$1,500 (US$1,049). The scheme covered all workers, including those who only worked casual shifts.

Under scaled-back subsidies, recipients will receive A$1,200 a fortnight, while those who work less than 20 hours a week will receive A$700 every two weeks.

From Jan 1, payments will fall to A$1,000 and $650 a fortnight, respective­ly.

The wage supplement­s have helped 3.5 million Australian­s and are widely credited with propping up the ailing economy after widespread social distancing restrictio­ns paralysed businesses.

However, Morrison said changes were needed to ensure enough support to the economy without overpaying casual workers.

He said his government would also trim unemployme­nt benefits, which were increased in March by A$550 a fortnight until Sept 30. While the benefits will continue, they will be more than halved.

Australia’s central bank welcomed the continuati­on of both wage and unemployme­nt support.

“They’re both providing important support to households and businesses. They’re both playing an important role in reducing the costly scarring to the economy,”

Philip Lowe, governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia, said in a speech yesterday.

The extension of the fiscal stimulus eases fears Australia would suffer a hard economic landing after September, with unemployme­nt already at a 22-year high.

But hopes for a quick recovery have been dashed as Australia struggles to contain new Covid19 outbreaks.

Authoritie­s in the southeaste­rn state of Victoria, whose capital Melbourne is in partial lockdown amid a new outbreak, reported 374 new Covid-19 cases yesterday, up from 275 cases detected on Monday.

Australia’s most populous state, New South Wales, yesterday reported 13 new cases. All but one of the new cases were acquired locally, authoritie­s said.

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