Rishi Sunak delivered his first budget as Chancellor in March 2020, as the COVID-19 pandemic was in its early stages in the UK. The country went into lockdown, requiring all but essential services to close. The government announced a series of measures to protect companies, and the jobs of employees whose firms were required to close as part of lockdown, including a furlough scheme that would see the government pay 80% of the wages of workers who were furloughed. The scheme was initially to run until the end of July, but later extended to October. By June, 9.3 million people were being financially supported by the scheme. There were concerns about unemployment, which, by the end of June was nearing 3 million, and threatening to exceed the previous highest unemployment figures last seen in 1986, and fears of a deep recession. In May 2020 it was announced that Sunak would deliver a summer statement in July aimed at helping to reduce the potential impact of a recession. Sunak delivered the statement to the House of Commons on 8 July.
Key points
The statement included the following provisions:
A temporary increase of the stamp duty threshold on property purchases from £125,000 to £500,000 with immediate effect until March 2021
A £1,000 jobs retention bonus for employers who bring back furloughed employees from the end of October 2020 until at least the end of December 2020; the bonus to be paid for each employee and applies to those earning over £520 a month
The creation of a kickstart scheme that will pay employers to train 16–24 year-olds "at risk of long-term unemployment"
The distribution of vouchers to every person in the UK as part of the "Eat Out to Help Out" scheme to encourage customers back into restaurants, bars and cafes; customers to receive a 50% discount worth up to £10 a head on meals from participating outlets from Mondays to Wednesdays throughout August 2020
A six-month reduction in value-added tax from 20% to 5% for the hospitality sector – food outlets, accommodation and attractions from 15 July 2020 to 12 January 2021.
A "green homes grant" to help make properties more energy efficient; the scheme to be extended to public sector buildings
Reaction
Responding to the statement, Anneliese Dodds, the Shadow Chancellor, accused Sunak of putting off the "big decisions" by choosing to present a statement rather than a full budget. Keir Starmer, the leader of the oppositionLabour Party, said the bonus scheme "should be targeted in the areas which most need it, not across the piece", while Bridget Phillipson, Labour's Shadow chief secretary to the Treasury, wrote to HM Revenue and Customs to ask them to publish their modelling for the job bonus scheme. The Institute of Fiscal Studies warned that taxes would have to rise to pay off the support measures put in place by the government. The IFS also suggested that raising the stamp duty threshold would adversely affect first time buyers, who are largely exempt from paying it, while benefiting sellers who could take advantage of the situation with higher property prices. Helen Miller, deputy director of the IFS described first time buyers as "a group that might actually be made worse off by the policy". The warning of tax rises was echoed by David Gauke, a former Conservative Party minister with HM Treasury, who said that either tax increases or spending cuts would be needed to pay off a £40bn public deficit built up during the pandemic. In a series of letters sent to the Chancellor before the statement was delivered, Jim Harra, the director of HM Revenue and Customs, questioned whether two of the schemes announced were value for money. He raised concerns about paying companies a £1,000 bonus to retain furloughed workers, a scheme estimated to cost the Treasury £9.4bn, and whether the 50% meal discount, estimated to cost £0.5bn, was cost effective, describing both at "sound policy rationale" but the effectiveness of which would be difficult to measure. In response the Chancellor said that action was needed to protect jobs, but admitted there would be a "dead weight" cost of the job retention bonus from firms who would retain their staff anyway. In a BBC interview the day after delivering the statement, Sunak said that he would not be able to protect "every single job" and that the UK was entering a "severe recession".
Aftermath
On 12 July, the High Street clothes retailer Primark became the first major company to say it would not take advantage of the jobs retention bonus, which would allow it to claim up to £30m from the government. Primark had placed 30,000 of its employees on furlough during the pandemic, but had since brought them all back to work. The company's announcement put pressure on other large employers to make similar announcements. On 19 July, property website Rightmove and catering firm Compass announced they would also not claim money from the scheme. The temporary cut in Value-added tax for the hospitality industry, worth £4bn, came into force on 15 July and will last until 12 January 2021. Nando's, Pret a Manger, KFC and McDonald's were among the firms to announce price reductions as a result.