The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Insolvency Service pays out £453.4m

- SIMON NEVILLE

The Insolvency Service paid out £453.4 million in missing wages and benefits to workers at firms that went bust last year, according to new data.

The payments made by the agency, which is part of the UK Government’s Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS), were at the highest levels in a decade, although the various company lifelines provided by the chancellor meant the number of firms going insolvent fell.

A total of £297.5m was paid out in redundancy pay, while £93.3m was for months that would have been earned working a notice period, according to numbers obtained under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act by real estate adviser Altus Group.

A further £28.4m went on unpaid holiday pay and £34.2m on outstandin­g payments for wages, overtime and commission.

The money comes from the National Insurance Fund, going to former members of staff as a result of their employer entering into administra­tion, liquidatio­n, a company voluntary arrangemen­t or another form of corporate insolvency.

The amount paid was up 31% on the previous year – £107.3m higher than the £346.1m paid during 2019.

This was the highest amount paid out of the National Insurance Fund at any time during the last decade, driven by the high street crisis, taking total payments from the fund to more than £3 billion during the last decade.

However, the £280bn of government support for businesses to survive during the pandemic is believed to have helped keep the actual number of underlying company insolvenci­es down – falling 27% on 2019.

Despite the government funds, several big-name retailers went bust in 2020, leading to significan­t redundanci­es across the high street.

Laura Ashley saw 155 stores close, with 2,300 job losses; BrightHous­e closed 240 stores with 2,700 redundanci­es and Debenhams lost 7,000 staff last year.

More job losses are expected to follow in 2021 as Debenhams sinks into liquidatio­n and Arcadia stores close for good.

Around 109,407 positions in the sector were affected last year, with 47% of those employees losing their jobs compared with around one third during the previous recession in 2008, according to the Centre for Retail Research.

The research group said this demonstrat­ed that retailers going bust are now much larger and the effects on staff more pronounced than during the global financial crisis with lockdowns and restrictio­ns leading to permanent shifts in shopping habits. It is calling on Chancellor Rishi Sunak to ensure the current rates holiday on retailers, leisure and hospitalit­y services is extended to keep viable firms afloat.

Robert Hayton, UK president of property tax at Altus Group, said: “Ending the holiday too early is one material pressure on company finances that risks affecting the recovery from the pandemic now the end is in sight.

“The chancellor must use his upcoming Budget to ensure viable businesses are adequately supported through a discerning targeted extension.”

Last week it was announced that around 650 people from 15 Debenhams stores in Scotland – including those in Aberdeen and Inverness – were being made redundant following news that the chain will not be reopening its doors north of the border.

 ??  ?? TOUGH TIMES: Further job losses are expected in 2021 as more big names succumb. Picture by Jason Hedges.
TOUGH TIMES: Further job losses are expected in 2021 as more big names succumb. Picture by Jason Hedges.

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