The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Labour offers to help get money to self-employed

● Shadow chancellor says government strategy has several gaps

- BY HARRIET LINE

Labour has pledged to work with the government to see whether payments for self-employed workers can be made more quickly after the chancellor announced that new coronaviru­s support measures would only be claimable from June.

Rishi Sunak has pledged to give millions of self-employed people a grant worth up to £2,500 a month, but shadow chancellor John McDonnell said that while he was relieved the policy has been brought forward, there are “quite a few gaps”.

He told BBC Breakfast: “I’m really relieved that it has been brought forward and I’m pleased. There’s quite a few gaps ... lots of self-employed people who have fallen outside the scheme for different reasons have contacted me overnight.

“But we’ll work with the government and try to get those gaps filled.

“The big issue that has come from most of them is having to wait until June for payments.

“Some are saying ‘Look, we can’t survive beyond the next few weeks’, so we’ll work with the government to see whether or not payments can be made more quickly. There were about 40,000 staff laid off from HMRC.

“Maybe one of the things the government could do is the same as the health service: invite many of those staff back to help us get the payments out the door to these self-employed workers.”

Mr McDonnell urged the government to increase statutory sick pay to cover people who are selfisolat­ing.

He said: “The chancellor is advising people to take out universal credit loans and grants, but it’s very difficult getting through the telephone system, let alone the internet with regards to that.

“But again, even if they had to fall back on sick pay, if that was at a high enough level then they can survive in terms of day-today expenditur­e.”

National chairman of the Federation of Small Businesses, Mike Cherry, said the organisati­on “very much welcomes the scheme”.

However, on those who have been operating their own business for under a year not being able to apply for the new funding, he said: “I think the chancellor yesterday said that the amount that some could get under universal credit was over £1,500 but others are saying it is just statutory sick pay and that is going to be a problem for many, many small businesses who just started up.”

Business Secretary Alok Sharma told BBC Breakfast: “The chancellor was very clear that we want to do this as quickly as possible, we’ve set a date of June, if we can do it faster we will, but it is a complicate­d system that we are designing and we want to make sure we get it absolutely right.”

Responding to Mr McDonnell’s calls for former HMRC staff to return, he added: “I don’t think the block right now is the number of people within HMRC, the issue here is building the system and that is what we’re doing.”

Outgoing Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn told the BBC on Thursday that the government’s response to the coronaviru­s pandemic showed he was “absolutely right” about public spending in the 2019 general election.

“They’ve now suddenly realised that they have to spend money to invest in the state, as we have always said as a party, and they have come around to a lot of that position,” Mr Corbyn said.

 ??  ?? APPEAL: Shadow chancellor­John McDonnell urged the government to increase statutory sick pay to cover people who are self-isolating
APPEAL: Shadow chancellor­John McDonnell urged the government to increase statutory sick pay to cover people who are self-isolating

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