Daily Express

RISHI’S £ 4.6bn JOBS BOOST FOR BRITAIN

- By Macer Hall Political Editor

RISHI Sunak will today pledge an extra £ 4.6billion from the Treasury to spur the economic recovery from Covid by creating and supporting hundreds of thousands of jobs.

Setting out spending plans for the next year, the Chancellor is to unveil a package of measures to help workers made redundant in the pandemic find new careers as soon as possible.

He will also promise tens of billions of pounds in long- term investment projects to kickstart economic growth.

Ahead of today’s statement to MPs, Mr Sunak said: “My number one priority is to protect jobs and livelihood­s across the UK. This Spending Review will ensure hundreds of thousands of jobs are supported and protected in the acute phase of this crisis and beyond, with a multi- billion package of investment to ensure that no one is left without hope or opportunit­y.”

His ideas include a £ 2.9billion Restart scheme to help one million unemployed people with job searches over the next three years. Those out of work for more than a year will be offered regular, intensive job- hunting support tailored to individual needs.

Mr Sunak will also promise £ 1.4billion to expand the capacity of Jobcentre Plus offices, ready for a surge in demand as a result of a downturn triggered by the pandemic lockdowns. The sums are part of a new multi- billion pound budget agreed for the Department for Work and Pensions in the Whitehall financial review.

The Chancellor will also approve £ 1.6billion for his Kickstart scheme in 2021/ 22. It aims to create six- month work experience placements for around 250,000 young people.

An apprentice­ship hiring incentive that was launched in August will be extended to March 31 next year, offering employers up to £ 2,000 for every youngster they take on.

Other measures to help employment to be announced today will include £ 375million for help to train workers in new skills. Out of that, £ 138million will go to fund the Government’s Lifetime Skills Guarantee training initiative and £ 127million will support skills training under the Chancellor’s Plan for Jobs announced earlier this year.

Mr Sunak’s plans for capital investment to be announced today include building homes, roads, railways and cycle lanes which will help create hundreds of thousands of job opportunit­ies around the country. His announceme­nts come on top of more than £ 200billion in Treasury initiative­s this year to support employment through the health crisis.

This includes paying towards the wages of nearly 10million furloughed employees as well as grants for around 2.6milion self- employed workers. Matthew Fell, policy director at the Confederat­ion of British Industry, said the Chancellor was right to focus on job creation as the economy looked to recover in 2021.

“Covid- 19 has swept away many job opportunit­ies, for young people in particular,” he said.

“The scarring effects of long- term unemployme­nt are all too real, so the sooner more people can get back into work the better.”

Claire Walker, co- executive director of policy at the British Chambers of Commerce, said: “The impact of coronaviru­s on firms’ ability to create and retain jobs has been significan­t.

“To help business communitie­s rebuild, it

is vital that the Government supports them to retrain and re- skill the UK workforce.”

A Tesco spokesman said: “At this challengin­g time for businesses we welcome this package for jobs and the boost for training from the Chancellor.

“We welcomed 1,000 Kickstarte­rs to our business earlier this month and are also pleased to see initiative­s such as the Lifetime Skills Guarantee which will help us to ensure that our colleagues, new and old, are able to upskill and continue their career developmen­t.”

In budget settlement­s for other Whitehall department­s, the Chancellor will also promise a £ 275million boost to increase capacity in courts to tackle the impact of the pandemic and support the Government’s crackdown on crime. He is also to confirm tens of millions of pounds for a Counter Terrorism Operations Centre to fight emerging threats to the UK.

At the same time Mr Sunak is expected to signal a series of budget cuts to some department­s as he begins setting a course to reduce the huge Treasury borrowing during the pandemic.

MPs anticipate a significan­t reduction in the Government’s multi- billion pound overseas aid budget. Officials are understood to be preparing legislatio­n to allow a cut to overseas developmen­t funding despite a law committing the Government to spending 0.7 per cent of annual GDP on aid.

Reducing it is likely to anger opposition MPs as well as some Tory backbenche­rs.

Labour’s Preet Kaur Gill, shadow internatio­nal developmen­t secretary, said: “During this pandemic the Government have handed over millions of pounds of UK taxpayers’ money to its friends yet are now turning their backs on the world’s poorest.

“This move will damage the UK’s reputation around the world and will only show our allies and detractors that Britain under Boris Johnson is no longer interested in fulfilling our responsibi­lities or leading on the global stage. “Labour are committed to spending 0.7 per cent of gross national income on aid to tackle global poverty and injustice, and will oppose any attempt from this Government to damage this country’s reputation by breaking that commitment,” she added. Mr Sunak is also expected to announce curbs on pay rises for millions of public sector workers. Some Whitehall sources have indicated that he could scale back plans for a rise in the National Living Wage next April from five per cent to two per cent.

RISHI Sunak is not the type of Chancellor who favours a defensive crouch. Rather than condemn young Britons to a grim future, he will use today’s spending review to ensure the economy can roar back to life when the pandemic ends.

At the heart of his plans is a very welcome £ 4.6billion cash injection to create and sustain hundreds of thousands of jobs.

His mission to help the unemployed back into work, support apprentice­ships and ensure around 250,000 young people can benefit from work experience placements is exciting.

One of Britain’s great strengths today is a courageous Chancellor who did not respond to the coronaviru­s crisis with fear, retreat and despair. Instead, he has intensifie­d efforts to bring new opportunit­y to individual­s and families across the country.

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 ??  ?? Vital help... Claire Walker of the BCC
Vital help... Claire Walker of the BCC
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 ??  ?? Recovery plans... Chancellor Rishi Sunak checks his Spending Review
Recovery plans... Chancellor Rishi Sunak checks his Spending Review
 ??  ?? Opportunit­ies... CBI’s Matthew Fell
Opportunit­ies... CBI’s Matthew Fell

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