Western Daily Press

POINTS AT A GLANCE

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RISHI Sunak unveiled a plan for jobs in a £30 billion mini-budget he said was designed to get the country through the economic crisis triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Here are the main points of the package.

Jobs Retention Bonus

The Chancellor stuck firm to the October deadline for the job retention furlough scheme to end but said it would be replaced with a new Jobs Retention Bonus.

Employers who bring back furloughed staff and continuous­ly employ them through to January will be paid a £1,000 bonus per employee as long as they are paid at least £520 on average a month.

Apprentice­ships

Mr Sunak said employers will be paid £1,000 to take on trainees and up to £2,000 to hire young apprentice­s.

He also outlined a kickstart scheme which will directly pay employers to create “decent” new jobs for any 16 to 24-yearold at risk of long-term unemployme­nt.

Mr Sunak said employers will need to provide training and support to find a permanent job and in return the Government will pay the young people’s wages for six months.

VAT cut for hospitalit­y industry

There was more for the hard-hit hospitalit­y industry as Mr Sunak announced a VAT cut on food, accommodat­ion and attraction­s from 20 per cent to 5 per cent from July 15 to January 12.

Green deal

The Chancellor confirmed a £2 billion “green homes grant” to help homeowners and landlords with vouchers make their properties more energy efficient.

Dosh for nosh

Mr Sunak announced an ‘Eat Out to Help Out’ discount among measures to get customers back into restaurant­s, cafes and pubs.

Meals eaten at any participat­ing business from Monday to Wednesday during August will be 50 per cent cheaper, up to a maximum discount of £10 per head for everyone. Businesses can then claim the money back, with the funds in their bank account within five working days.

Stamp duty slashed

For the housing market, the Chancellor confirmed that stamp duty was being abolished on transactio­ns below £500,000 until March 31, 2021, effective immediatel­y.

He said the average stamp duty bill will fall by £4,500 as a result and nearly nine out of 10 people buying a main home this year will pay none at all.

And the bill

The Chancellor said the package would cost up to £30 billion. And he did not announce any new revenue raising measures.

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