Daily Mail

Bailout bill tops £100bn but firms beg for more

- by Lucy White

BUSINESSES are demanding more tax- payer cash to help them survive new lockdown restrictio­ns, as the Treasury revealed the bill for propping up struggling firms has topped £100bn so far.

Six trade associatio­ns have written to Chancellor Rishi Sunak urging him to extend the emergency loan schemes due to end this month.

Sunak has also come under mounting pressure to prolong the furlough scheme to avoid a wave of job losses.

Business leaders are calling for an extension for firms which will be hardest hit by new lockdown measures, which include 10pm curfews for pubs and restaurant­s in England and an instructio­n to work from home if you can.

This has raised fears of mass redundanci­es in the hospitalit­y sector and among High Street retailers, which rely heavily on office workers.

As Premier Inn owner Whitbread announced plans to cut up to 6000 jobs, Nick Mackenzie, Greene King’s chief executive, said: ‘Pubs are just starting to get back on their feet after lockdown and these new restrictio­ns are a significan­t setback.

‘We urgently need the Government to extend the furlough scheme for hospitalit­y venues and confirm what additional support it will provide to protect jobs and the future of pubs.’

Yesterday, Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey, who recently backed Sunak’s decision to end the Job Retention

Scheme on October 31, urged the Government to ‘stop and rethink the approach’.

In a webinar hosted by the British Chambers of Commerce, he said that future schemes should be targeted at the sectors most in need.

His interventi­on came as the Chancellor received a joint letter from a group of trade bodies including the Finance & Leasing Associatio­n, and the Consumer Credit Associatio­n, calling for extensions to emergency loan schemes. They said: ‘Now is not the time for the British Business Bank to curtail its support schemes.’

The Chancellor is already expected to extend the loans schemes, which were due to expire at the start of November, to the end of November.

But the plea for more support came as official figures revealed that more than £105bn has been dished out in emergency loans and wage subsidies for furloughed workers so far.

Banks have handed out £15.5bn to 66,585 firms under the Coronaviru­s Business Interrupti­on Loan Scheme.

These loans are 80pc backed by the Government – meaning if firms become unable to pay, the taxpayer is on the hook.

And almost 1.3m Bounce Back loans, worth £38bn and which carry a 100pc Government guarantee, have been handed to smaller companies.

A total of £39.3bn has so far been claimed by 1.2m employers under the Coronaviru­s Jobs Retention Scheme, which has supported 9.6m jobs at some stage during the crisis.

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