Eastern Eye (UK)

Firms seek quick Covid aid

CBI HEAD SEEKS EXTENSION OF FURLOUGH SCHEME UNTIL JUNE AHEAD OF MARCH BUDGET

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BRITISH firms called on Tuesday (19) for another £7.6 billion of emergency government help, saying they cannot wait until chancellor Rishi Sunak’s March budget to learn if they will get more pandemic support.

With Britain back under lockdown and companies adjusting to life after Brexit, firms are taking big decisions about jobs and investment and need to know if their financial lifelines will be extended, the Confederat­ion of British Industry (CBI) said. “We just have to finish the job. Now would be a very odd time to end that support,” CBI director-general Tony Danker said in a statement.

Sunak has extended his support measures several times already and has said his response to the pandemic will cost £280bn during the current financial year, saddling Britain with a peacetime record budget deficit.

But he is facing calls on many fronts to spend yet more, including from MPs, some from the ruling Conservati­ves, who want an emergency welfare benefit increase to be prolonged.

The CBI said Sunak should extend until June his broad job retention scheme, which is scheduled to expire in April, and then follow it up with targeted support for jobs in sectors facing a slow recovery such as aviation.

He should give firms more time to pay back value-added tax which was deferred last year, grant a similar deferral for early 2021 and extend a business rates tax exemption for companies forced to close by the lockdown as well as their suppliers.

“The rule of thumb must be that business support remains in parallel to restrictio­ns and that those measures do not come to a sudden stop,” Danker said.

“The government’s support from the very start of this crisis has protected many jobs and livelihood­s, and progress on the vaccine rollout brings real cause for optimism,” he added. “But a year of disrupted demand and extensive restrictio­ns to company operations is taking its toll. Staff morale has taken a hit. Business resilience has hit a new low,” he added.

The CBI said its longer-term priority was an overhaul of the business rates system that it said was outdated and discouragi­ng investment in low-carbon energy.

Danker said it was too soon to start raising Britain’s corporatio­n tax rate, one of the lowest among rich economies after a Times report that Sunak was drawing up plans to increase it to start fixing the public finances. “It would be wrong to raise business taxes when we don’t have a recovery,” Danker said.

Danker added he hoped to see improved regulatory rules after Britain finally departed the European Union’s single market at the start of the year. “Better regulation, smarter regulation, more modern regulation is definitely of interest,” he told reporters.

 ??  ?? PANDEMIC EFFECT: The second wave of Covid has plunged Britain into its worst economic slump; (inset below) Rishi Sunak
PANDEMIC EFFECT: The second wave of Covid has plunged Britain into its worst economic slump; (inset below) Rishi Sunak

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