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Sunak's schemes not enough to help rental sector - trade body

A leading trade body has broadly welcomed the Winter Economy Plan outlined by Chancellor Rishi Sunak yesterday, but says this still does not do enough to help the private rental sector.

Chris Norris, policy director for the National Residential Landlords Association, says: “We welcome the government’s measures to subsidise wages. We warned that the end of the furlough scheme ran the risk of many households facing further difficulties in paying their rents.[This] announcement is an important first step to prevent this.

“That said our research still shows that private landlords across England have faced rental loses of up to £437m as a result of COVID-19.

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“It is vital that the government now follows the example set in Wales and Scotland and develops interest free, government guaranteed hardship loans to help tenants pay off rent arrears built as a result of the pandemic. We cannot expect them, or landlords, the vast majority of whom are individuals without the means to absorb significant losses, to continue to struggle without support.”

Sunak’s specific measures include: 

- confirmation the furlough scheme will conclude at the end of October;

- this will be replaced by a new Jobs Support Scheme (JSS), starting in November, focussing on employers who choose to keep staff on shorter hours rather than making them redundant;

- under the JSS employees must work at least a third of normal hours and be paid for those hours by employers, and the government will the contribute some of the remaining pay;

- the Treasury calculates that most workers on shorter hours should be able to achieve 77 per cent of pre-Covid income thanks to JSS combining state payments and employers' contributions;

- JSS is aimed at firms classed as smaller and medium sized businesses, but only those larger firms that show reduced income;

- the JSS will be open across the UK and apply to firms even if they have not taken advantage of the furlough scheme;

- the Jobs Retention Bonus of £1,000 - already announced and due in late January - remains in place for companies employing staff who were once furloughed;

- those businesses that have borrowed under the Bounce Back Loan Scheme will have more flexibility on repayment terms - up to 10 yars in some cases, under a new government 'Pay As You Grow' initiative;

- the application deadline for all Coronavirus loan schemes, including the Future Fund, have been extended to November 30;

- businesses which deferred VAT payments will no longer have to pay a lump sum at the end of March 2021 - they will have an option of splitting it into smaller interest-free repayments over the course of 11 months;

- any self-assessed income tax payers who need extra help can also now extend their outstanding tax bill over 12 months from January;

- finally the hospitality and tourism sectors were expecting their temporary VAT reduction (from 20 to five per cent) to end in January, but it will now conclude at the end of March instead.

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    Tenant loans must be paid direct to the landlords otherwise more taxpayers’ money will be thrown away.

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    • 25 September 2020 16:01 PM

    What about the many occupants who aren't tenants but are LODGERS.
    Govt doesn't seem to mention lodgers at all.
    They seem to consider that it is only tenants that have temporary tenure in properties owned by LL be they live-in or otherwise.

    Lodgers are also victims of the CV19 thing.

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