UK announces $37B virus package
Finance Minister Rishi Sunak announced the budget to tackle unemployment as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
The UK government has unveiled a package worth $37 billion (£30 billion, 33 billion euros) to save jobs and help the young into work to kickstart the coronavirus-hit economy.
Delivering a mini-budget to parliament, Finance Minister Rishi Sunak's measures included bonuses to companies retaining staff and taking on apprentices, investment in 'green' jobs and allowing the whole country to enjoy discounted meals in restaurants.
"People need to know that although hardship lies ahead, no-one will be left without hope," said Chancellor of the Exchequer Sunak.
Noting that "people are anxious about losing their jobs, about unemployment rising," Sunak told the country on Wednesday:
"We're not just going to accept this."
For me, this has never just been a question of economics, but of values:
— Rishi Sunak (@RishiSunak) July 8, 2020
I believe in the nobility of work.
I believe in the inspiring power of opportunity.
I believe in the British people’s fortitude and endurance.
A Plan For Jobs: https://t.co/Dr9u1kWzSU pic.twitter.com/AKBpfI1SEm
Cutting VAT
Other measures included a temporary cut to the level of value added tax on food, accommodation and attractions – and lifting the threshold at which stamp duty tax is due on home purchases to help the construction sector.
Britain has suffered Europe's deadliest outbreak of Covid-19 and a nationwide shutdown led to the worst economic contraction among the G7 leading industrialised states.
Sunak said the UK economy had contracted by 25 percent over the coronavirus lockdown – "the same amount it grew in the previous 18 years."
Rishi Sunak’s statement is a textbook plan for restoring business-as-usual: prop up the housing market, ignore renters, create low-paid jobs, get people consuming again, ignore the climate crisis.
— Laurie Macfarlane (@L__Macfarlane) July 8, 2020
Totally oblivious to the scale of the challenges we face.
Green investment
The chancellor also confirmed $3.8 billion (£3-billion) of green investment, after British Prime Minister Boris Johnson vowed to "build, build, build" out of the economic crisis.
The investment package includes $2.5 billion (£2 billion) in grants for households to insulate homes and make them more energy efficient, and another $1.3 billion (£1 billion) for public sector buildings, including hospitals.
The plan is part also of Britain's long-term pledge to reduce carbon emissions to net zero by 2050 to tackle climate change.
Virus-hit economy
Britain imposed a nationwide lockdown on March 23 to halt the spread of Covid-19 but has gradually begun easing restrictions in the hope of boosting ailing businesses.
Recent official data showed the UK's biggest quarterly contraction for more than 40 years – at minus 2.2 percent – in the January-March period.
However, the data included only the first full week of the lockdown and economists expect subsequent damage to be considerably worse for the second quarter.
Another contraction would place Britain in a technical recession.
Since the crisis began, the Bank of England has pumped cash stimulus worth $378.2 (£300 billion) into Britain's virus-hit economy and slashed its main interest rate to a record-low 0.1 percent – moves aimed at propping up businesses and saving jobs.
Experts estimate the total cost of state emergency measures meanwhile could run as high as $378.2 billion (£300 billion).
READ MORE: British economy on track for biggest contraction 'in living memory'