Covid lockdown UK: Rishi Sunak ‘to extend furlough until July’ in next week’s Budget

Chancellor Rishi Sunak is set to extend the Government’s massive furlough scheme until at least July after Prime Minister Boris Johnson unveiled an ultra-cautious roadmap for easing the third lockdown.

The Chancellor is expected to pump huge sums of money at next week’s Budget – the first the Government has presented to the Commons since the start of the pandemic – into the devastated economy.

Furlough, which is currently due to stop at the end of April, was implemented during the spring outbreak to prevent millions of job losses and businesses which have been forced to close from going under. 

The Treasury has already spent more than £300billion supporting UK plc through the crisis, with Mr Sunak keen to placate the rebellious Tory backbench by vowing to balance the books once the pandemic is over. 

However, senior government sources have now confirmed that bailouts will continue into the summer, with one telling the Sun: ‘Obviously Rishi will be making a big announcement about this next week. But it is safe to say that Covid measures aren’t going to be turned off.’

Yesterday the Prime Minister had strongly hinted that the scheme would be extended, as he insisted the Government will ‘continue to do whatever it takes to protect jobs’ for the ‘duration of the pandemic’. 

Boris Johnson gave a strong hint that the massive furlough scheme would be extended again yesterday as he unveiled an ultra-cautious 'roadmap' for easing lockdown

Chancellor Rishi Sunak is set to extend the massive furlough scheme until at least July. It comes as Boris Johnson gave a strong hint that the massive furlough scheme would be extended again as he unveiled an ultra-cautious ‘roadmap’ for easing lockdown

The roadmap document published by the government yesterday underlines the scale of the hit from coronavirus, which has caused the worst recession in 300 years

The roadmap document published by the government yesterday underlines the scale of the hit from coronavirus, which has caused the worst recession in 300 years

The roadmap document points out that young people in particular have been hammered by the lockdowns

The roadmap document points out that young people in particular have been hammered by the lockdowns

Another blow for Britain’s devastated airline industry as Boris Johnson BANS foreign travel until at least May 17 – leaving fed-up Britons with FOUR more months to wait for some overseas sun 

Foreign travel for leisure and holidays will be banned until at least May 17, Boris Johnson revealed today, causing ‘dismay’ for travellers and the aviation industry who say it is simply ‘too late’ to restart flights.

The Prime Minister’s diktat will cause yet more pain for holidaymakers as well as airlines and holiday companies who have lost billions and cut thousands of jobs since the start of the pandemic a year ago. 

Mr Johnson’s roadmap out of lockdown, published today, says foreign holidays will not be allowed for at least another 12 weeks with scant detail on how the final decision to open up air travel will be made.  

Critics have called the decision to wait until May 17 to open up flights a ‘hammer blow’ to the aviation industry, which directly and indirectly supports up to 4million jobs and around 100,000 businesses in the UK.

Gloria Guevara, President & CEO of the World Travel & Tourism Council, based in London, told MailOnline: ‘Delaying the return of international travel until mid-May will come as yet another hammer blow to the already struggling Travel & Tourism sector, which has been battling to survive for the best part of a year.

‘The sector was banking its hopes on a quicker return to international travel, so there will be widespread dismay at this news. Its return is crucial if the UK economy is to recover from the ravages of the pandemic, given the sector generates £200billion to the UK’s GDP’. 

Mr Sunak has told Tory MPs that support for some businesses will need to last beyond the summer, particularly for those that will not open any time soon, such as nightclubs. 

They added that the Chancellor will present the furlough as an ‘offset’ to the tax rises as he delivers his second Budget on March 3, and is expected to ‘lay down markers’ for future tax rises to start balancing the books.  

Corporation tax is set to rise from next year from 19 to 24 per cent, in staggered stages. High earners are also likely to be hit.

An announcement is also expected on freeports, including naming the first ‘three or four’, a source said. The Autumn Budget is expected to be used to announce tax rises to come in from 2022.   

Mr Johnson yesterday unveiled an exit strategy from the third national lockdown, with schools to return from March 8 but businesses to continue facing damaging curbs for many months to come. 

Pubs and restaurants will be able to serve outdoors from April 12, and gyms can reopen. However, the hospitality sector will not be allowed to operate indoors until at least May, and it is not until June that legal social distancing restrictions might be removed. 

In the Commons, Mr Johnson stopped short of confirming outright that support for businesses will be extended, with Mr Sunak due to deliver his Budget next week. But he nodded to the impending closure of the furlough scheme at the end of April, as well as the fact other support is due to lapse.

‘In view of these cautious but, I hope, irreversible changes, people may be concerned about what these changes mean for the various support packages for livelihoods, for people and the economy,’ Mr Johnson said.

‘So I want to reassure the House we will not pull the rug out – for the duration of the pandemic the Government will continue to do whatever it takes to protect jobs and livelihoods across the UK.

‘And the Chancellor will set out further details in the Budget next Wednesday.’

Mr Sunak is also looking at extensions to business rates relief that are due to run out in March.

Mike Cherry, chairman of the Federation of Small Businesses, told the Times: ‘The chancellor must deliver on the prime minister’s ‘whatever it takes’ pledge at next week’s budget. 

‘On one side of the coin we have continued restrictions; on the other, we need corresponding business support. 

‘Business support measures need to reflect this road map to avoid forcing the great businesses of tomorrow under before they’ve had a chance to realise their potential.’ 

The roadmap document published by the government yesterday underlines the scale of the hit from coronavirus, which has caused the worst recession in 300 years.

Mr Sunak has told Tory MPs that support for some businesses will need to last beyond the summer, particularly for those that will not open any time soon, such as nightclubs

It comes as Boris Johnson hinted that furlough would be extended again

Mr Sunak has told Tory MPs that support for some businesses will need to last beyond the summer, particularly for those that will not open any time soon, such as nightclubs. It comes as Boris Johnson hinted that furlough would be extended again 

The government's road map summarises the different steps ministers are hoping to take based on the tests being met

The government’s road map summarises the different steps ministers are hoping to take based on the tests being met

The High Street prepares to fight back – but what will be left?: Non-essential shops in England will be able to open on April 12 – after more than three months of being shut down – as bosses say they have lost £22billion during pandemic 

Non-essential shops in England will be able to open by April 12 at the earliest after more than three months of being shut down.  

Stores will open at the same time that hairdressers, pubs and gyms can get back up and running – regardless of mounting fears about the economic meltdown.

Meanwhile, the Prime Minister confirmed schools will reopen from March 8, followed by the next stage of loosening on March 29, when two households will be able to gather and the Rule of Six makes a comeback.

Retail bosses welcomed the April 12 announcement, but urged Chancellor Rishi Sunak to ‘relieve struggling businesses of bills they cannot currently pay’.

The British Retail Consortium’s chief executive, Helen Dickinson, said non-food stores have lost more than £22billion over the course of the pandemic.

It points out that young people in particular have been hammered by the lockdowns. 

‘Businesses and their suppliers are suffering from enforced closures and restrictions on social contact – particularly aviation, pubs, restaurants and hotels, sports and events, arts, entertainment and conferences – and so are their suppliers,’ the blueprint said.  

‘Even though the Government has provided over £280billion in financial support since March 2020, jobs have inevitably been lost given the unprecedented challenge of the pandemic.

‘The number of employees on payroll fell by 828,000 between February and December 2020.

‘The pain has not been felt equally. Staff in the hardest-hit sectors, such as hospitality, are more likely to be young, female, from an ethnic minority, and lower paid.  

‘The unemployment rate for those aged 18 to 24 increased from 10.5 per cent in the three months to February 2020 to 13.2 per cent in the three months to November.’ 

Shadow chancellor Anneliese Dodds tweeted: ‘Indoor hospitality won’t reopen until 17 May at the earliest – more than a month after they have to start paying business rates and more than two weeks after furlough ends.

‘Businesses needed certainty today. Instead this Conservative Government has left them in the lurch again.’

Union warned workers have been left worrying about their jobs after the PM’s announcement because some businesses will not be able to reopen before the furlough scheme ends.

TUC general secretary Frances O’Grady said there could be a gap of months before workers know if they still have a job.

‘The Government must stop dithering and delaying and extend the full furlough scheme for at least the rest of 2021, and it must (give) urgent support for the self-employed.

‘With jobs and livelihoods hanging in the balance there is no reason to keep workers and businesses waiting.

‘We need a plan for supporting the parts of the economy hit hardest by repeated lockdown restrictions, like hospitality, retail, aviation and the creative industries.

‘Ministers cannot watch from the sidelines as companies go the wall.

‘If the Prime Minister wants to make sure we never go into lockdown again, he must do a better job of keeping people safe as they return to workplaces in large numbers.

‘That means beefing up workplace safety guidance so that it’s in line with the latest science and cracking down on employers who put staff in danger,’ she said.