UK furlough scheme now covers 8.4 million workers

Workers

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Some 8.4 million workers are now covered by the government’s furlough scheme, up from eight million a week earlier, the Treasury has said.

Claims for subsidies filed by employers rose to £15bn from £11.1bn, it added.

The scheme, brought in to mitigate the effects of coronavirus, allows employees to receive 80% of their monthly salary up to £2,500.

A similar scheme for self-employed workers saw 2.3 million claims made worth £6.8bn.

The Self-Employed Income Support Scheme, as it is known, differs from the furlough scheme because it is a grant paid out in a single instalment covering three months and amounting to 80% of average profit.

The furlough scheme, officially called the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme, was originally intended to last until the end of July, but has now been extended until the end of October.

  • What does it mean if I’ve been furloughed by work?

Chancellor Rishi Sunak has confirmed that it will continue to provide the same level of earnings, but has said the government will ask companies to “start sharing” the cost of the scheme from August.

Sources have told the BBC the Treasury still expects to be paying more than half the costs between August and October.

‘I’m one of the people who slipped through the cracks’

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Sian Melonie

Marketing professional Sian Melonie, from Hackney in east London, is one of the many people who, through no fault of their own, are not in a position to benefit from the government’s furlough scheme or its help for self-employed workers.

After 12 years in work, she decided to go self-employed last year and began working for a large cinema group.

She was due to start a fixed-term contract from 30 March, but that offer was withdrawn when the pandemic hit.

“l don’t qualify for any support. I can’t be furloughed and I don’t qualify for self-employed benefits, because I’m new to it,” she told the BBC. “I’m one of the people who slipped through the cracks.”

But Sian says she is not angry and is using her savings to tide her over. “However, my concern is how much longer it goes on for, because l am essentially spending what l had saved for my self-assessment tax for later this year.

“I’m hoping things get back to normal and the economy can bounce back.”

Recent figures from the government’s independent economic forecaster, the Office for Budget Responsibility, indicate that the cost of the government’s efforts to combat the coronavirus pandemic is expected to hit £123.2bn.

The OBR expects annual borrowing to equal 15.2% of the UK economy, which would be the highest since the 22.1% seen at the end of World War Two.

It said it had increased its estimate because of the rising cost of the furlough scheme.

If you have been affected by the furlough scheme, email: