An article in Car Dealer Magazine outlines a £2.9bn scheme to help nearly a million people who have been unemployed for more than a year find work is being launched by the Treasury. Chancellor Rishi Sunak made the announcement about the Restart scheme as he delivered his Spending Review to the House of Commons.
He told MPs: ‘Our health emergency is not yet over, and the economic emergency has only just begun, so our immediate priority is to protect people’s lives and livelihoods.’.
The scheme will run for three years.
From Car Dealer Magazine
A £2.9bn scheme to help nearly a million people who have been unemployed for more than a year find work is being launched by the Treasury.
Chancellor Rishi Sunak made the announcement about the Restart scheme this lunchtime (Nov 25) as he delivered his Spending Review to the House of Commons.
He told MPs: ‘Our health emergency is not yet over, and the economic emergency has only just begun, so our immediate priority is to protect people’s lives and livelihoods.’.
The scheme will run for three years.
It will then drop every year to reach 4.4 per cent by the end of 2024.
In addition, it will be extended to 23-year-olds and over, which should benefit some two million people who are among the lowest paid.
Businesses will be helped with the business rates multiplier being frozen in 2021-22, which it is estimated will save companies in England £575m over the next five years.
Other measures announced included:
- Funding for electric vehicle charging infrastructure
- More than £58bn of investment for road and rail
- Nearly £19bn of transport investment in 2021, including £1.7bn on local roads maintenance and upgrades
- £120m for 500 new zero-emission buses
A total of 2.1m public sector workers who earn below £24,000 will be guaranteed a pay rise of at least £250, said Sunak, while more than a million doctors, nurses and others in the NHS will also get a pay increase.
Others in the public sector will have their pay frozen, though.
The UK’s borrowing this year is expected to reach £394bn – the highest in peacetime – with the economy forecast to shrink by 11.3 per cent, which Sunak said would be the lowest drop in output for more than three centuries.