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Rishi Sunak's furlough replacement: How does the Job Support Scheme work, who is eligible and how much will I get?

Rishi Sunak's new help for business and jobs at a glace 

 

Workers will be able to pick up 77 per cent of their wages for doing as little as a third of their regular hours under plans unveiled by Rishi Sunak today.    

The Chancellor unveiled the Job Support Scheme to 'directly support' wages of staff in 'viable' roles for six months from November.

It will replace the furlough, or Job Retention Scheme , which is due to come to an end on October 31.

But the new scheme is less generous than furlough, with the Chancellor admitting it was too expensive to continue after October.

Under the new system employees' wages receive a maximum subsidy of 22 per cent from the Treasury, depending on how many hours they work.

But firms must pick up the additional 55 per cent, compared to 20 per cent under furlough. 

It has sparked fears that many businesses will simply lay staff off instead of taking it up. 

Paul Johnson, director of the IFS think tank, said: 'The new job support scheme represents a significant new intervention from government to support jobs through the crisis. 

'But it is significantly less generous than the furlough scheme it replaces -  though remarkably the Chancellor provided no indication of the likely cost of the scheme.

'He is trying to plot a difficult path between supporting viable jobs while not keeping people in jobs that will not be there once we emerge from the crisis. 

'With employers now having to pay at least 55 per cent of the normal wages of their employees it is clear that many jobs will be lost over the coming months.' 

It will cost the Treasury an estimated £300 million a month for every million workers who take up the scheme - with Government contributions per worker capped at £697.92 per month.

By comparison, the furlough scheme has cost the Government £39.3 billion - about £6 billion a month.

At a live press conference this afternoon, Mr Sunak said: 'We can't continue to provide the same degree of support as we did at the beginning of this crisis and sustain it at that level.

'It's not affordable and not sustainable for a prolonged period of time.' 

The Chancellor said the new jobs support scheme was 'more targeted' than furlough, and would help businesses who really need assistance.

'Larger businesses on this scheme will have to demonstrate that their revenues are falling as a result of what is happening to them,' he explained.

He added: 'You can use this scheme in conjunction with the jobs retention bonus that we put in place in the summer, and if you look at the combined impact of those, I think it provides a very significant cash incentive for businesses to retain their staff even if that means on reduced hours.'

£8 in every £10 covered: Employees will get all their wages for hours they do work, and two-thirds of their wages for hours they have not worked

 Under the JSS plans, businesses will continue to pay workers for the hours they work. But it will help support workers wages for the hours they cannot work due to lockdown restrictions on working hours or because of a lack of business due to economic decline.

For the regular hours that they are missing out on working, the Treasury and the employer will both pay a third of their wages.

This means workers will get all their wages for hours they do work, and two-thirds of their wages for hours they have not worked.  

Source: HM Treasury

Source: HM Treasury

To be eligible, workers have to have worked at least a third (33 per cent) of their regular hours. In this scenario, a worker would receive 77 per cent of their total wages, with the firm picking up 55 per cent and the Treasury 22 per cent.

The percentages change depending on the number of hours worked. 

This is a large increase from the furlough scheme, under which firms paid in just 20 per cent of wages, with the Government picking up the rest. But the difference is that under this, staff have to at least work some hours - under furlough they did not have to work at all. 

The Government contribution will be capped at £697.92 a month and it will be paid in arrears - your employer pays you and then claims it back.

But the Treasury hopes it will allow businesses to reduce staff hours instead of simply laying them off because they cannot afford to pay them.  

But experts warned that the scheme still leaves a lot of pressure on businesses and may not be enough to see off a vast wave of redundancies when it replaces furlough on November 1. 

Rishi's 'pay as you grow' plan to help business survival by easing loan and tax payments

Businesses will get more time to pay back emergency loans and tax bills under plans unveiled today by the Chancellor.

More than a million companies which took out Bounce Back Loans will be allowed to pay them back over 10 years instead of six under a 'pay as you grow' plan outlined by Rishi Sunak in the Commons.

He told MPs that this would almost halve the monthly repayments facing businesses, amid fears that economic damage may last monger than first thought. 

It brings the Bounce back Loans scheme into line with Germany's Schnellkredit - which allows repayments over a decade but charges higher interest.

Firms will also be able to take advantage of interest-only repayments for up to six months and be able to take payment holidays for the same period of time, once they have made six repayments.

In addition the Chancellor has extended the availability of Bounce Back Loans, Coronavirus Business Interruption Loans, Coronavirus Large Business Interruption Loans and the Future Fund until November 30.

So far these have paid out more more than a million loans totalling around £58billion.

In addition a new payment scheme will give more breathing space for more than £30 billion of deferred VAT payments, allowing companies and VAT-registered sole traders to make 11 interest-free payments in 2021-22 rather than a lump sum at the end of March.

The temporary 15 per cent VAT cut for tourism and hospitality that took the rate from 20 per cent to 5 per cent will be extended until the end of March.

But not all firms believe it will work.

Jon Kay, director of Bury St Edmunds-based Camp Tails Doggy Daycare, said: 'Pay-as-you-grow, interest-only terms, additional payment holidays, it's ultimately putting lipstick on a pig. Debt is debt and for many small businesses struggling to bounce back in a brutal environment it will be the final nail in the coffin. The Chancellor needs to announce protection for employers as much as employees. The latter don't exist without the former, after all.'

What IS a 'viable job'? Chancellor dodges key question 

As part of a package of measures, the Chancellor said the new job support scheme was aimed at protecting 'viable' roles rather than all posts which have been kept going as a result of state support under the furlough programme.

But he was rather vague on what constituted a viable job. 

Critics suggests that jobs which may appear impossible at the moment - working in theatres for example, are hopefully only in hibernation until things improve. 

Picked up on his language at the press conference this afternoon, he declined to say which roles he thinks have now become unviable. 

'It's impossible for me to predict given the uncertainty of the exact shape of the labour market,' he said.

'When we started the furlough scheme it surprised everybody, economic commentators alike, the scale of the take-up of that.

'My expectation and hope is that this new scheme will be able to benefit large numbers of people and help protect their jobs through the difficult winter months, especially as demand is depressed in their companies.

'It's not for me to sit here and make pronouncements upon exactly what job is viable or not but what we do need to do is evolve our support now that we're through the acute phase of the crisis.'

Helen Barnard, director of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation said: 'Jobs that have been viable in the past and will be again in the future need specific support to get through the current crisis. 

'But the design of this scheme risks undermining its success and leading to more job losses by creating an unnecessary disincentive to employers to make use of it.

'Where jobs are truly not viable, the government must urgently make good on its manifesto promise to establish a Right to Retrain so that whole areas and industries are not cut adrift amid a gathering storm. 

'Too many people now find themselves on the brink of being pulled further into poverty during the course of this year – people in the lowest paid roles, in areas where there are fewer new opportunities, and sectors where close contact is unavoidable.'

And Julian Bird, chief executive of the Society of London Theatre and UK Theatre, warned of further job losses and redundancies in the performing arts sector.

'The Chancellor's announcements today do little to help the theatre and performing arts sector where the majority of venues and productions remain closed due to Covid,' he said.

'Our previously viable and world-beating sector is facing decimation, as with no income organisations cannot bring their staff back to work.

'Without targeted and vitally needed support for the workforce in this sector, we will see further job losses and redundancies.

'While the extension of the self-employed scheme is welcome, with the amount offered reduced to 20 per cent thousands will face real financial peril.'

Who is eligible ? Can I apply if my firm has never furloughed anyone?

Who is eligible ? Can I apply if my firm has never furloughed anyone?

The new job support scheme will be targeted at small and medium-sized firms, with larger companies of more than 250 employees only eligible if turnover has fallen due to the crisis. 

All employers with a UK bank account and UK PAYE schemes can claim the grant. 

Neither the employer nor the employee needs to have previously used the furlough Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme to apply for the replacement.

There will be no financial assessment test for small and medium enterprises .

But firms will be prohibited from making workers redundant while on the new programme, and larger listed companies will face restrictions on making dividend payments to shareholders 

A Treasury spokesman said: 'In order to support viable jobs, for the first three months of the scheme the employee must work at least 33 per cent of their usual hours. 

'After three months, the Government will consider whether to increase this minimum hours threshold.'

So how will it affect my wages?

John is a builder earning £10 and working a 40-hour week. He takes home £400 before tax.

Under Rishi Sunak's scheme he would work a minimum of 13 hours a week. For those 13 hours he would be paid £308. Of that, his employer pays £220 and the Treasury £80. 

The Treasury also gave an example of how it would work:  

The scheme is geared up so that the more people work, the less Treasury has to pay. But that does risk firms deliberately cutting hours in order to obtain more of a grant.

 


Mixed reaction 

Trade union and business leaders have spoken out in support the new scheme - some of it caveated.

TUC general secretary Frances O'Grady said: 'Unions have been pushing hard for continued jobs support for working people.

'We are pleased the Chancellor has listened and done the right thing. This scheme will provide a lifeline for many firms with a viable future beyond the pandemic.

'But there's still unfinished business. Unworked hours under the scheme must not be wasted.

'Ministers must work with business and unions to offer high-quality retraining, so workers are prepared for the future economy.'

Others praised the Chancellor's 'bold steps', saying hundreds of thousands of jobs will be saved.

Dame Carolyn Fairbairn, director general of the CBI, said it was right to target help on jobs with a future.

'These bold steps from the Treasury will save hundreds of thousands of viable jobs this winter,' she said.

'Wage support, tax deferrals and help for the self-employed will reduce the scarring effect of unnecessary job losses as the UK tackles the virus. Further business rates relief should remain on the table.

'The Chancellor has listened to evidence from business and unions, acting decisively. It is this spirit of agility and collaboration that will help make 2021 a year of growth and renewal.' 

But economists were less bowled over. 

Clare McNeil, associate director of the left-leaning IPPR think tank said: 'Choosing to continue to support the incomes of workers and businesses through the hugely uncertain next six months is the right decision. However, getting the design of the scheme right will be imperative to avoid layoffs, and the plan has three major flaws.'

She warned it may not go far enough in preventing lay-offs because firms will have to pay too much of wages, plus other costs like NI contributions and pensions.

The scheme is mitigated by the Job Retention Bonus, which pays out £1,000 for each worker kept on, but it ends in January and is closed to new applications

She also said the requirement for at least a third of hours to be worked would badly affect firms unable to trade at all.  

She added: 'However the scheme is more generous than expected in allowing any SME to be eligible for support, while large businesses have to demonstrate that their turnover has been hit but Coronavirus.'  

The scheme has echoes of the German Kurzarbeit job subsidy measure, which has been recently extended until the end of 2021.

It allows employers to reduce employees' hours while keeping them in a job. The Government pays workers a percentage of the money they would have got for working those lost hours. 

For example, for someone who usually works 37 hours a week but can only now work 17, a company could pay them their full wage for the 17 hours but it could charge the Government to pay a proportion of the remaining 20 hours.

According to the Munich-based Institute for Economic Research, at the height of the pandemic, half of all German firms had at least some of their staff on the scheme. 

Influential British political figures including former prime minister Gordon Brown urged the Government to bring in such a scheme, or a similar French-style system, after the furlough scheme ends in October.   

More help for the self-employed but many miss out 

Chancellor Rishi Sunak said that the Government will cover 20 per cent of the earnings of self-employed people after the current scheme, which covers 80 per cent of earnings, runs out.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak said that the Government will cover 20 per cent of the earnings of self-employed people after the current scheme, which covers 80 per cent of earnings, runs out.

More than a million people will have to fend for themselves after the Chancellor failed to plug holes in his support for the self-employed, a trade body has warned.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak said that the Government will cover 20 per cent of the earnings of self-employed people after the current scheme, which covers 80 per cent of earnings, runs out.

He also promised to defer income tax self-assessment, a measure that will be 'of particular importance' to self employed people.

But the help misses out around 1.5 million people who have been given far too little support through the crisis, said Andy Chamberlain, the director of policy at the Association of Independent Professionals and the Self-Employed .

Only sole traders who filed tax returns in the financial year ending April 2019 were eligible for the previous Self-Employment Income Support Scheme , and the Chancellor did not appear to close these gaps on Thursday.

'The support for the self-employed announced today is woefully inadequate.

'Although it is right for the Chancellor to extend Seiss, the support announced today still excludes one in three self-employed people,' Mr Chamberlain said.

'Limited company freelancers and the newly self-employed almost entirely missed out on support in the last lockdown and have faced bleak months of financial devastation.

'Now they face a dark winter ahead unless the government does more for them.'

He added that the 20 per cent cap on support is likely to prove insufficient for many.

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