Coronavirus: Australia unveils $114b scheme to guarantee wages for six million workers

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the aim was to ensure that struggling businesses retained staff while the economy went into hibernation. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

SYDNEY - Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Monday (March 30) announced a A$130 billion (S$114 billion) scheme to provide replacement wages to up to six million people who may lose their jobs otherwise due to the Covid-19 outbreak.

Describing the package as an "economic lifeline," Mr Morrison said the aim was to ensure that struggling businesses retained staff while the economy went into hibernation. The six-month scheme will be offered to almost half the workforce and will provide people with A$1,500 per fortnight, or about 70 per cent of the average wage.

"We are living in unprecedented times… this calls for unprecedented action," Mr Morrison said.

"Our government has made a decision no government has made before in Australia in response to crises such as these. And I hope and pray they never have to again."

Australia has about 4,250 confirmed cases of Covid-19. Eighteen people have died.

To try to control the outbreak, the government has banned entry to all travellers, other than citizens and residents. States have imposed measures to close schools and non-essential businesses, and some are limiting public gatherings to two people.

Australia, like many other countries around the world, should enter a recession,later this year. ending its world-beating 28-year run of continuous growth.

An estimated one million people have lost their jobs due to the pandemic. Significantly, the wage entitlements announced yesterday will not be made through the welfare system. Instead, payments will be made by the Federal Government directly to businesses which will then pay staff.

Self-employed, part-time and casual workers are also eligible.

Businesses will only be eligible if their turnover has dropped by at least 30 per cent due to the pandemic. For larger companies, those with a turnover of more than A$1 billion, turnover must fall by at least 50 per cent. Within an hour of the announcement yesterday, 8,000 businesses had registered to access the payments.

Mr Morrison said the scheme was crucial to avoid economic collapse due to the sudden halt to business activity, warning that the pandemic could result in countries around the world descending into chaos.

"This will not be Australia," he said.

Business groups welcomed the measures yesterday, urging employers to rehire staff if possible.

Meanwhile, the government has also moved to ensure that foreigners do not try to take over struggling Australian companies which have been hit hard or suffered plunging share prices due to the pandemic.

The Foreign Investment Review Board, which oversees foreign investment, will now screen all investments to ensure they are in the national interest.

Previously, countries with free trade deals with Australia, such as China, the United States and Singapore, only needed to have standard investments in Australian companies approved if the deal was worth more than A$1.2 billion.

The Treasurer, Mr Josh Frydenberg, said the move was temporary and was not an "investment freeze".

"Australia is open for business," he said.

So far, the federal government and the Reserve Bank, Australia's central bank, have announced packages worth A$320 billion to help the economy weather the current crisis. This amounts to about 16 per cent of the nation's gross domestic product.

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