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Coronavirus: Renters 'need more help' in UK's plans – BBC News, BBC News

Coronavirus: Renters 'need more help' in UK's plans – BBC News, BBC News
        

            

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Rishi Sunak : “We have never in peacetime faced an economic fight like this one”

The government is facing questions over whether its £ 350 bn package of measures will be enough to support the UK economy through the coronavirus crisis.

It includes mortgage “holidays” for those in financial difficulty as well as £ bn in loans and £ bn in other aid to protect businesses.

But some MPs, trade bodies and unions said more support was needed sooner, particularly for renters and those working in the so-called gig economy.

It comes as the UK death toll hit .

Unveiling the measures at a press conference on Tuesday , Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Prime Minister Boris Johnson vowed to do “whatever it takes” to support the UK economy through a challenge unprecedented in peacetime.

But concerns have been raised over whether the measures do enough to help people including those who have already been made redundant, the self-employed and renters.

                                                                                                                       

                                                                                                                       

The chancellor said the £ bn in loans – equivalent to % of GDP – would be available from next week to help businesses pay for supplies, rent and salaries.

Other measures to be put in place include extended business rates relief for all firms in the hospitality sector and funding grants of between £ , 14 and £ , for small businesses.

Mortgage lenders will also offer a three-month holiday for people in financial difficulty as a result of the virus.

Help for airlines, which have been hit by travel bans and a slump demand, is also being considered.

            

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Boris Johnson. : “We must act like any wartime government”

Rachel Reeves, Labor chairwoman of the Commons Business Committee, said there was nothing in the chancellor’s announcement to offer financial support to people who were already on statutory sick pay, self-isolating or had been laid off.

And unions raised concerns there were no measures to help freelancers and people working in the gig economy.

Other MPs called for more help for renters – although Mr Sunak said measures would be announced in the “coming days”.

Labor leader Jeremy Corbyn urged the government to suspend home rental fees and ban evictions of tenants during the coronavirus crisis.

The Prime Minister is likely to face more questions on the government response to the crisis when he appears before MPs in the Commons for Prime Minister’s Questions at 15: 10 GMT.

                                                                                                                       

Companies and trade bodies welcomed the financial measures, but said they needed to work through the fine print.

Adam Marshall, chief executive of the British Chambers of Commerce, said the size of the grants and loans were good news for smaller businesses.

“But what’s going to be hugely important is that cash actually gets to the front line and gets there quickly,” he said.

Paul Johnson, director of the Institute of Fiscal Studies, said the business rates holiday offered “a substantial level of support” but was “probably not well targeted at saving jobs in those industries”.

“It will remain as expensive to pay people and if demand is down then jobs are likely to go,” he added.

He said it may be necessary to cut employer national insurance contributions, delay increases to the National Living Wage, and increase support for individuals through Universal Credit.

                                                                                                       Image copyright                   Getty Images                                                        
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                                     The airlines industry is among those to be hit by the virus                              

The additional measures came after the public were told to avoid all non-essential contact and travel .

By next weekend, those with the most serious health conditions must be “largely shielded from social contact for around weeks “, under the the latest government guidance .

Meanwhile, leading scientists at Porton Down, the Ministry of Defense’s highly secure research laboratory in Wiltshire, have been called in to help deal with the spread of coronavirus, the BBC has been told.

A team of about defense scientists at the laboratory are now working with public health officials to analyze the spread of the virus and to help with testing.

The laboratory was also called in to help following the poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal in Salisbury.

                                                                                                                       

The number of people who have died with the virus in the UK reached on Tuesday, , after a second death was confirmed in Scotland , as well as (a second in Wales and a further 19 in England.

The Government Chief Scientific Adviser Sir Patrick Vallance said it would be a “good outcome” for the UK if the number of deaths from the virus could be kept below 20, 10 Some

Some 1, people have tested positive for the virus in the UK, according to the latest Department of Health figures – but the actual number of cases could be as high as 330, 10.

Among the latest confirmed cases is a newborn baby at James Paget hospital in Norfolk.

In other developments:

  • All non-urgent operations in England and Scotland will be postponed from
  • April to free up beds for virus patients

  • The Foreign Office advised British nationals to avoid all non-essential foreign travel for at least (days)
  • The
  • (European Union will seal its borders for days No new Crown Court trials will take place in England and Wales if they are expected to last longer than three days
  • The government set out emergency legislation , which would give police the powers to arrest and isolate people to protect public health

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