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Maggie Beer hailed for "ethical" move

<p dir="ltr">Maggie Beer Holdings, formerly Longtable Group, has proved why it’s an Aussie favourite: by returning the $825,000 it was given by the federal government as part of the JobKeeper program during the pandemic.</p> <p dir="ltr">In September, it became mandatory for publicly listed companies to disclose their wage subsidies, as well as if repayments had been made. On Tuesday, it was revealed that Maggie Beer Holdings, a company that consists of four brands: Maggie Beer, Paris Creek Farms, Saint David Dairy and Hampers &amp; Gifts Australia, had been given $825,000 during the 2020-21 fiscal year that has been paid back in its entirety.</p> <p dir="ltr">Speaking to<span> </span><em>NCA Newswire,<span> </span></em>Labor MP Andrew Leigh congratulated Maggie Beer and her company for the move, saying, "Maggie Beer has demonstrated admirable corporate citizenship by voluntarily handing back JobKeeper support that it didn't need.</p> <p dir="ltr">"No one will ever be forced to repay JobKeeper, but it's terrific to see firms like Maggie Beer doing the right thing."</p> <p dir="ltr">He added, "I'll be buying some extra Maggie Beer products as Christmas gifts, and I'm sure many shoppers will likewise choose to reward their ethical decision."</p> <p dir="ltr">In addition to heading up a company trying to navigate the pandemic, in 2020 Maggie Beer had to deal with the passing of her beloved daughter Saskia at the age of 46. Speaking to<span> </span><em>The Weekly<span> </span></em>last November, Beer said she was “taken aback” by the number of people paying their respects. "It was something that was so extreme – in the numbers of people and the real understanding of Saskia's contribution. She had done so much in that short life. The support was huge and wonderful and really unbelievable."</p> <p dir="ltr">From 30 March to 27 September 2020, eligible businesses were able to receive $1500 per fortnight per employee to cover the cost of wages, in an effort to help keep businesses afloat during the COVID-19 pandemic. Many companies have been criticised for keeping the money paid to them by the government during this time despite making a profit during the 2019-20 and 2020-21 financial years.</p> <p dir="ltr">Maggie Beer is known for producing picnic favourites like the Maggie Beer pate, quince paste, and truffle triple cream brie, as well as gourmet ice cream. Paris Creek Farms produces organic dairy products including butter, yoghurt, milk, and cheese. Saint David Dairy, based in Fitzroy, produces similar products, and aims to “bring the small local dairy back to the streets of Inner Melbourne.” Hampers &amp; Gifts Australia consists of The Hamper Emporium, which specialises in premium gift hampers, and Gifts Australia, which focuses on on-trend gifts.</p> <p dir="ltr"><em>Image: Robert Prezioso/Getty Images</em></p>

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3.5 million Aussies to get $300 pay cuts

<p>3.5 million Australians will lose $300 from their government funded $1,500 Job Keeper pay check from September 28.</p> <p>The new scheme was legislated earlier this month.</p> <p>As of now, Aussies receiving JobKeeper are eligible for $1,500 per fortnight.</p> <p>However, 28 September, those who are working more than 20 hours per week will receive $1,200 per fortnight.</p> <p>This is around 80 per cent of the minimum wage and is called Extension 1. </p> <p>The new system is two-tiered and those who work less than 20 hours per week will receive $750 per fortnight.</p> <p>"We are now extending and transitioning," Prime Minister Scott Morrison said.</p> <p>"Transitioning and looking to a day when Australian communities don't need JobKeeper and when Australians can then run their businesses and hold their jobs sustained by a vibrant and growing economy instead."</p> <p>The first extension period runs until 4 January, and Extension 2 will kick in from that date and last until 28 March 2021.</p> <p>This scheme will see those working more than 20 hours per week eligible for $1,000 per fortnight, and those working less than 20 hours per week eligible for $650 per fortnight.</p> <p>To be eligible for Extension 1, businesses will need to show that their actual GST turnover declined 30, 50 or 15 per cent (depending on the size of your business) in the September 2020 quarter compared to September 2019.</p> <p>Businesses will also need to have satisfied the original decline in turnover test unless they are enrolling in JobKeeper for the first time. </p> <p>To meet the criteria for Extension 2, businesses will need to show their actual GST turnover declined 30, 50 or 15 per cent (depending on the size of your business) in the quarter ending 31 December 2020.</p>

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Loophole in JobKeeper payments worries tax experts

<p><span>A large loophole has been found in the assessment process for the JobKeeper payment that tax experts worry could be exploited by hundreds of thousands of Aussies.</span><br /><br /><span>In order to receive the full $1,200 per fortnight in wage support, sole traders will need to show the Tax Office they were working more than 20 hours per week in the reference period.</span><br /><br /><span>However the reference period is between the two fortnightly pay periods prior to either March 1, 2020 or July 1, 2020 - whichever had the higher hours worked.</span><br /><br /><span>The activity test given to sole traders simply means they need to be "actively engaged in the business" for 20 hours a week to receive the full JobKeeper rate.</span><br /><br /><span>However Chartered Accountants tax lead Michael Croker told <a rel="noopener" href="https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-09-08/jobkeeper-loophole-will-tempt-sole-traders-into-rorts/12638334" target="_blank"><em>ABC news</em></a> that "What you're pointing out is a tempting opportunity.” .</span><br /><br /><span>Chartered Accountants represents 120,000 number crunchers around the country.</span><br /><br /><span>The profession is already trying to raise the fact it will be difficult for small businesses and sole traders to rally up their hours of work each fortnight.</span><br /><br /><span>"The Treasurer announced that for sole traders that they needed to be 'actively engaged in the business' for 20 hours or more per week to get the higher rate," Mr Croker explained.</span><br /><br /><span>He noted that they would otherwise only be eligible for the part-time rate of $750.</span><br /><br /><span>"Now, you could be washing the dishes at night and thinking about your business at the same time — that's a very loose test."</span><br /><br /><span>Mr Crocker says many Australians across the nation will be tempted to rort the system, adding that the JobKeeper system requires a degree of honesty for those applying.</span><br /><br /><span>"What we expect to see is common sense prevail around this," he said. .</span><br /><br /><span>"I think to a degree we shouldn't make a mountain out of a molehill here.</span><br /><br /><span>"We're about the economy and jobs, not about compliance and regulation."</span><br /><br /><span>ATO has announced in a statement they have a JobKeeper integrity team whose sole purpose is to make sure JobKeeper is going to those who genuinely need it.</span><br /><br /><span>"We use a range of sophisticated data and behavioural models to identify applications which we will need to review before we make a payment," an ATO spokesperson said in a statement.</span><br /><br /><span>"We will also continue to review applications after payment cycles to identify any risks and issues which cause us concern."</span></p>

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JobKeeper extended to Christmas but eligibility has tightened

<div class="post_body_wrapper"> <div class="post_body"> <div class="body_text "> <p>The JobKeeper wage subsidy is going to be extended until Christmas at a reduced rate of over $1000-a-fortnight.</p> <p>There will be a tighter eligibility test for companies trying to get the wage subsidy.</p> <p><a rel="noopener" href="https://www.news.com.au/finance/economy/australian-economy/coronavirus-australia-jobkeeper-to-be-extended-until-christmas-eligibility-tightened/news-story/2d8836820665488a1daebb74e4dea28f" target="_blank" class="_e75a791d-denali-editor-page-rtflink"><em>News.com.au</em></a><em> </em>has confirmed that JobKeeper will reduce the current wage subsidy from $1,500 a fortnight but extend the support to coronavirus affected businesses until the end of the year.</p> <p>The new measures will be outlined on Thursday, but casuals will no longer be able to secure a flat-rate payment regardless of whether they are full-time or part-time in the new JobKeeper phase.</p> <p>Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has confirmed that the new turnover test will apply when the current scheme will end on September 27th to ensure that companies that have bounced back from COVID-19 are removed from the program.</p> <p>“As we have highlighted there will be another phase of income support. It will stick to the principles that have guided us well. It will be targeted, it will be proportionate, it will be scalable, and it will be using existing systems,‘’ he told <a rel="noopener" href="http://news.com.au/" target="_blank" class="_e75a791d-denali-editor-page-rtflink">news.com.au</a>.</p> <p>“The JobKeeper payment is an economic lifeline to millions of Australians and hundreds of thousands of businesses.</p> <p>“Barring the spread of the virus in significant numbers beyond Victoria, we expect to see the other state and territory economies continue their recovery towards a COVIDSafe economy.”</p> <p>The new monthly testing options for JobKeeper could include companies to submit monthly updates on business turnover to the Australian Taxation Office to prove that cash flow is down.</p> <p>Finance Minister Mathias Cormann confirmed the shift to a new turnover test as sensible.</p> <p>“When the JobKeeper program was first announced, and businesses had to demonstrate a drop in turnover of 30 per cent or 50 per cent depending on their level of turnover, once they were in they were in for the entire six month period,” he told Sky News on Sunday morning.</p> <p>“As we get to the end of that six months, towards the end of September, it is going to be important to reassess which businesses still should be receiving this support.</p> <p>“In the first six months, irrespective of what happened to your turnover after you initially qualified, you were in — but as we go into this next period, there is a need to reassess whether that support, you still need it for specific businesses."</p> </div> </div> </div>

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We’ll need more JobKeeper: Why even the best case for jobs isn’t good

<p>When it comes to the outlook for employment, there’s good news and bad news.</p> <p>To begin with the good news: with a bit of luck, the next few months will see the fastest expansion of employment in Australia’s history.</p> <p>The bad news? Well, there’s virtually no chance it will be enough to get employment to where it was in March, before the COVID-19 shutdown.</p> <p>In fact, even on a best-case scenario it’s likely by the end of September we will only be back to the worst points of the 1980s and 1990s recessions.</p> <p><strong>The best-case scenario</strong></p> <p>Other Bureau of Statistics data suggests that between mid-March and mid-April employment fell <a href="https://drive.google.com/file/d/1EEze6-rwkdcKgJ0iLWD7PfmWoMz8ob6Q/view">1.3 to 1.6 million</a>.</p> <p><a href="https://www.afr.com/politics/federal/prime-minister-scott-morrison-hopes-850-000-back-at-work-by-july-20200508-p54r12">Treasury</a> estimates that the planned reopening of the economy will result in a bounceback of 850,000 jobs.</p> <p>Suppose that a decrease of 1.3 million turns out to be the trough and recovery is uninterrupted.</p> <p>Employment at the end of September would then be 440,000 below where it was in March, 3.4% lower.</p> <p>The turnaround would be a considerable achievement.</p> <p>But even if it happens, we will have only recovered to around the worst points of the 1980s and 1990s recessions, where employment decreased by about 4 per cent.</p> <p>Employment won’t recover fully in this best-case scenario because some parts of the economy will still be shut down (including international travel) and COVID-19 will continue to cause many consumers to spend less than usual.</p> <p><strong>That best case is unlikely</strong></p> <p>There are several reasons to worry about whether the best-case can be achieved.</p> <p>First, job gains from reopening businesses are likely to be offset by losses in employment in other industries suffering from reduced consumer demand and business investment.</p> <p>While cafes and restaurants may start up again, Bureau of Statistics data shows that employment has <a href="https://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/Latestproducts/6160.0.55.001Main%20Features5Week%20ending%202%20May%202020?opendocument&amp;tabname=Summary&amp;prodno=6160.0.55.001&amp;issue=Week%20ending%202%20May%202020&amp;num=&amp;">begun to decline</a> in large industries such as construction and professional service.</p> <p>Second, the effects of reopening may not be all we expect. Labour hoarding – where businesses retain more workers than needed during an economic downturn - might mean that reopening doesn’t translate into as many new jobs as expected.</p> <p>This is likely to be particularly acute given that JobKeeper has effectively paid employers to subsidise labour.</p> <p>Third, impacts from longer-run structural changes in the economy might begin to cause employment losses, especially as JobKeeper is partially unwound.</p> <p><strong>So what are we to do?</strong></p> <p>Even under the best-case scenario employment will be substantially lower than before COVID-19 well into the future. And we can’t presume the best-case will happen. A compelling case exists for substantial ongoing economic stimulus post-September 2020.</p> <p>The labour market will not have fully recovered by then. To remove stimulus would only set back recovery. The question therefore should not be: is stimulus needed, but rather, what size and type of stimulus is needed.</p> <p>Continuing JobKeeper beyond September 2020 could have an important role in providing income security to affected workers and macroeconomic stimulus.</p> <p>It is a known policy, it operates effectively, and it appears to have community support. Replacing it with an alternative type of stimulus could risk harming confidence and the recovery.</p> <p><strong>We can’t simply end JobKeeper</strong></p> <p>An extra (and considerable) advantage of continuing JobKeeper is allowing time for a staged transition away from it. Stopping it will inevitably push up unemployment.</p> <p>A staged transition would spread out that adjustment rather than creating a shock in September.</p> <p>A transition from JobKeeper could be done via stepped decreases in the size of payment or progressively restricting eligibility as industries or businesses recover. The transition could begin at the end of September, or earlier if it is judged that employment is likely to have already recovered substantially before then.</p> <p>An objection to retaining JobKeeper is that it is preventing adjustment in the labour market, and disrupting the normal process of businesses starting up and failing.</p> <p>There are two responses.</p> <p>First, the question is not about whether JobKeeper should be permanent, but about the timing of its removal.</p> <p>Whenever it is (or starts to be) removed, labour mobility will return and any firms on life support will disappear. Having this happen via a staged transition is better than having it happen all at once.</p> <p>Second, the potential economic losses from unemployment in a depressed economy swamp the potential losses from having inefficient firms operating for longer.</p> <p>Our number one priority has to be maintaining and restoring employment.</p> <p><em>Written by Jeff Borland. Republished with permission of <a href="https://theconversation.com/why-even-the-best-case-for-jobs-isnt-good-well-need-more-jobkeeper-139648">The Conversation.</a> </em></p>

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Treasurer Josh Frydenberg admits $60 billion JobKeeper error is “regrettable”

<p>Prime Minister Scott Morrison has taken responsibility for a “regrettable” $60 billion JobKeeper reporting error.</p> <p>In an opinion piece published on <em>The Australian </em>Monday, Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said Treasury massively overestimated the number of people who would need the JobKeeper wage subsidy because it assumed in March the COVID-19 health crisis would be much worse.</p> <p>The Federal Government had previously said more than 6 million workers would receive $1,500 fortnightly wage subsidy, but on Friday admitted that the scheme would only cover about half that number.</p> <p>It also revised the program’s estimated cost from $130 billion to $70 billion.</p> <p>“Ultimately, I have to take responsibilities for those things,” Morrison said on Sunday.</p> <p>“So sure, the estimate was overstated.</p> <p>“But what it means is Australians won’t have to borrow as much money. This is not money that is sitting in the bank somewhere, this $60 billion, that is all money that would have otherwise had to be borrowed.”</p> <p>On Friday, Frydenberg said the mistake was “good news” and had been picked up before it impacted the payments that the government had already released.</p> <p>“It is welcome news that the impact on the public purse from the program will not be as great as initially estimated,” he said.</p> <p>Labor has called for Frydenberg to explain the miscalculation to a Senate inquiry.</p> <p>Opposition Senate Leader Penny Wong told the ABC’s <em>Insiders</em> the mistake was a “$60 billion black hole in the economic credibility” of the government.</p> <p>“When you’ve got a budget blunder of this size, I reckon it’s about time you fronted up and explained it,” Wong said.</p> <p>Wong previously said the $60 billion should be used to expand the JobKeeper program to include more casuals.</p> <p>Frydenberg said he would not answer calls from Labor to front a senate committee.</p> <p>“This is just a political stunt from the Labor Party,” he told the ABC on Monday.</p>

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Australia’s $130 billion JobKeeper payment: what the experts think

<p>The A$130 billion payment will be benefit six million of Australia’s 13 million employees through their employers.</p> <p>It will ensure each employee kept on in a business that has lost custom gets at least <a href="https://theconversation.com/the-key-to-the-success-of-the-130-billion-wage-subsidy-is-retrospective-paid-work-135042">$1,500 per fortnight</a> for six months. But the devil is in the detail.</p> <p>We asked three experts to pick the package apart.</p> <p><strong>Steven Hamilton</strong></p> <p><em>Visiting Scholar, Tax and Transfer Policy Institute, Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University</em></p> <p>This is a welcome <a href="https://treasury.gov.au/sites/default/files/2020-03/Fact_sheet_supporting_businesses_1.pdf">move</a> by the government that will keep many businesses afloat and connected to their employees, which are critical to a speedy recovery. It is commendable that the government reversed course so quickly given rapidly deteriorating economic conditions.</p> <p>You can’t shut down the economy for months without providing massive support to businesses and workers. At A$130 billion, this package alone is worth 12% of the economy over the next six months. Along with the measures already announced, it takes our fiscal support to a similar scale as recently legislated in the United States.</p> <p>Targeting only businesses experiencing a revenue loss limits profiteering. Those currently doing well won’t get unneeded support. It applies to all full-time, part-time, and long-term casual employees, as well as the self-employed, and it forces all participating firms to pay workers at least the $1,500 per fortnight subsidy.</p> <p>It could have several unintended consequences. It might encourage firms to limit sales to push revenue down below the turnover threshold.</p> <p>For example, for Qantas the subsidy would be almost $600 million, but to receive it, its revenue will need to fall to 50% below where it was this time last year. That might discourage it from reopening routes, which would slow the recovery.</p> <p>The scheme will also make it harder for businesses desperately in need of staff (such as supermarkets) to hire new workers from currently struggling businesses.</p> <p>To do so, they would need to entice workers to move from what might be suddenly better-paid jobs (everyone benefiting from the scheme must receive at least $1,500 per fortngiht) to less well paid ones.</p> <p>And the choice to subsidise the largest businesses in Australia is questionable.</p> <p>The major banks are excluded, but every other large company with at least a 50% reduction in revenue is included. Specific, targeted measures for the worst-affected industries might have been a better approach.</p> <p><strong>David Peetz</strong></p> <p><em>Professor of Employment Relations, Centre for Work, Organisation and Wellbeing, Griffith University</em></p> <p>Dangers often associated with wage subsidy schemes — like wasting money on jobs that would have been created anyway, or substituting one type of worker for another — aren’t much of a concern when a wage subsidy is introduced in an environment in which revenue and employment is diving.</p> <p>Making the scheme <a href="https://treasury.gov.au/sites/default/files/2020-03/Fact_sheet_Info_for_Employers_0.pdf">temporary</a>, and restricting it to firms facing a 30% drop in revenue (50% for big businesses) greatly reduces this danger.</p> <p>That said, the scheme will mainly target workers at or near the minimum wage. That’s because the payment is set close to the minimum wage.</p> <p>In effect, firms can rehire or keep on minimum-wage workers for free.</p> <p>For workers on average full-time adult earnings, which are about twice the minimum wage, the subsidy is nowhere near as big. Many are still likely to lose their jobs, as we have already seen.</p> <p>And the scheme introduces strange incentives. The same payment is received for a part-time worker as for a full-time worker on any wage. (The weekend leak that part-timers would be excluded seems to have been a furphy.)</p> <p>Many part-timers’ wages will be less than the subsidy. But the employer still has to pay them the $750 per week. The payroll is simpler the fewer employees are on it, so the employer might give one part-timer the bulk of the hours and retrench the others.</p> <p>Many part-timers are casuals, though, and they aren’t covered unless they are “<a href="https://treasury.gov.au/sites/default/files/2020-03/Fact_sheet_supporting_businesses_1.pdf">long term</a>” casuals (seemingly a contradiction in terms).</p> <p>This means many casuals can expect to be sacked in favour of workers who can be put into “free” $750 per week jobs.</p> <p>Meanwhile, the superannuation guarantee no longer applies to wages covered by the jobseeker payment, including wages the employer would have paid anyway. That’s something that could lead to all sorts of legal complexities in the future.</p> <p><strong>Anthony Forsyth</strong></p> <p><em>Professor of Workplace Law, RMIT University</em></p> <p>My comments focus on the government’s claim that its JobKeeper payment is more generous and broader than the UK’s <a href="https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/guidance-to-employers-and-businesses-about-covid-19/covid-19-support-for-businesses">Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme</a>.</p> <p>Australia’s scheme is definitely <a href="https://treasury.gov.au/sites/default/files/2020-03/Fact_sheet_Info_for_Employees_0.pdf">broader</a>, with the aim of providing support to up to six million Australians over coming months.</p> <p>Eligibility will depend on a business suffering at least 30% reduced turnover or 50% for businesses with more than $1 billion turnover.</p> <p>It enables employees to receive income support payments where they have been stood down, or already made redundant where the business wants to rehire the employee with Jobkeeper payment support. In the UK, only “furloughed” employees (stood down) are eligible for payments.</p> <p>But the UK scheme provides payments to those on “zero hours contracts” (akin to casuals). Where hours have varied, payments are based on last year’s average.</p> <p>However in Australia, casuals can only claim Jobkeeper payment where they have been employed for at least 12 months. Many casual workers will be ineligible given the high turnover in hard-hit sectors such as accommodation, cafés and food services.</p> <p>Casual teaching contracts in universities are often for less than a year.</p> <p>As for generosity, Australia’s Jobkeeper payment of around A$3,000 per month is far lower than the UK’s, which is £2,500 per month, worth more than A$5,000.</p> <p>Australia’s payment is 70% of the median wage. The government’s claim that employees in retail and hospitality will get the median wage in those industries simply reinforces their low-paid status to begin with.</p> <p>The government specifically mentioned that New Zealanders working in Australia would be able to access the JobKeeper payment along with some other categories of visa</p> <p>But the Victorian Trades Hall’s Migrant Workers Centre believes this will leave 1.1 million temporary migrant workers outside the scheme and needing assistance.</p> <p>Another gap is the hundreds of thousands of workers in the gig economy.</p> <p>We are relying more than ever on food delivery riders and drivers. Many are incorrectly categorised as self-employed contractors. JobKeeper will cover self-employed individuals but they must be able to show at least 30% decline in their turnover.</p> <p>Most gig workers will not have the business systems set up to demonstrate this, as they are in reality employees who have had supposed “contractor” status imposed on them by the platforms they provide services for.</p> <p><em>Written by Steven Hamilton, Anthony Forsyth and Devid Peetz. Republished with permission of </em><a href="https://theconversation.com/australias-130-billion-jobkeeper-payment-what-the-experts-think-135043"><em>The Conversation.</em></a></p> <p><em> </em></p>

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$1500 a fortnight JobKeeper wage subsidy in massive $130 billion program

<p>The Morrison government will provide a flat $1,500 a fortnight JobKeeper payment per employee for businesses to retain or rehire nearly six million workers, in a massive $130 billion six-month wage subsidy scheme to limit the economic devastation caused by the coronavirus.</p> <p>Describing the initiative as “unprecedented action” for “unprecedented times”, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said this was a “uniquely Australian” solution to keep enterprises and their workers connected through to “the other side” of the crisis.</p> <p>He said no Australian government had ever made such a decision “and I hope and pray they never have to again.”</p> <p>The payment, made through the tax system, applies for workers of large, medium and small enterprises, and not-for-profits. It will start flowing from May 1, but will be backdated to March 30.</p> <p>It will be a flat rate for all those eligible, who include full-time, part-time, and casual workers (provided they have been with their employer for a year). Self-employed individuals will also be eligible.</p> <p>The payment is about 70% of the national median wage. For workers in the accommodation, hospitality and retail sectors - sectors hardest hit by the crisis - it will equate to a full median replacement wage.</p> <p>To be eligible, enterprises with an annual turnover of less than $1 billion must have lost at least 30% of their revenue after March 1, relative to a comparable period a year ago.</p> <p>For businesses with turnovers of more than $1 billion the reduction in revenue has to be at least 50%.</p> <p>Where workers have already lost their jobs, they can be rehired by their employer, provided they were attached to the enterprise on March 1.</p> <p>This will mean some people who have applied for a Centrelink payment will reconnect with their firm and will move to the JobKeeper payment.</p> <p>Morrison and Treasurer Josh Frydenberg announced the scheme at 4 pm and almost 8000 businesses had registered by 5 pm.</p> <p>The $1,500 a fortnight will be paid whether the employee is working (in the case of an enterprise still operating) or not (if the business is not trading).</p> <p>Businesses that keep operating will have to pay each employee at least the $1,500, but there may be discretion about what’s paid above that, depending on whether there is an award.</p> <p>The $130 billion JobKeeper scheme is the third tranche of emergency assistance the government has unveiled since March 12.</p> <p>“This is about keeping the connection between the employer and the employee and keeping people in their jobs even though the business they work for may go into hibernation and close down for six months,” Morrison said.</p> <p> “We will give millions of eligible businesses and their workers a lifeline to not only get through this crisis, but bounce back together on the other side,” he said.</p> <p>The latest initiative brings the total support made available in the crisis to $320 billion, including $90 billion assistance from the Reserve Bank. The total amounts to the equivalent of 16.4% of GDP.</p> <p>Frydenberg said Australia was “about to go through one of the toughest times in its history”. The government had doubled the welfare safety net and now had gone even further, he said.</p> <p>Parliament - in a “mini” form - will sit to pass the package as soon as the legislation has been drafted.</p> <p>Business welcomed the scheme. The Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry said it was a “game changer”.</p> <p>The Business Council of Australia said the government had “made the right choice to work through the systems we already have in place to get assistance where it is needed as soon as possible.”</p> <p>But ACTU secretary, Sally McManus, expressed concern that $1,500 a fornight might not be enough. She said the full median wage of $1,375 a week “is what is needed”.</p> <p>The government is also temporarily liberalising access to income support. The JobSeeker payment has been subject to a partner income test of about $48,000. This is being temporarily relaxed so an eligible person can receive the JobSeeker payment and the associated new Coronavirus supplement of $550 a fortnight provided their partner earns less than $79,762 a year</p> <p>In other coronavirus developments on Monday, Victoria announced it had moved to “stage 3” of the response to the crisis, with the two-person restriction on gatherings to become legally enforceable.</p> <p>The two-person rule was announced by Morrison on Sunday but it was left up to the states to decide whether to make it enforceable.</p> <p>Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews said: “If you are having friends over for dinner or friends over for drinks that are not members of your household, then you are breaking the law”.</p> <p>“You face an on-the-spot fine of more than $1,600.”</p> <p>NSW is also announced it will enforce the rule.</p> <p>Queensland, which has closed its border, is toughening border controls.</p> <p>Federal Deputy Chief Medical Officer Paul Kelly flagged modelling the government is using in its response will be made available later this week. Morrison has faced pressure for the modelling’s release.</p> <p>Kelly told a news conference he had asked his staff “to organise a meeting later this week where the modelling and the epidemiology and the public health response will be unlocked, and people will be able to ask questions about that.</p> <p>"I think we have been quite open with components of the modelling, but I respect that there is a large number of ways that modelling can be done, and so we need to be more transparent, and we will be.”</p> <p><em>Written by Michelle Grattan. Republished with permission of </em><a href="https://theconversation.com/1-500-a-fortnight-jobkeeper-wage-subsidy-in-massive-130-billion-program-135049"><em>The Conversation.</em></a></p> <p> </p>

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The secret sauce in the government’s A$130 billion JobKeeper payment is that it will be retrospective, in the best possible way.

<p>It’ll not only go to employers who have suffered losses and had employees on their books tonight, March 30, but to employers who have suffered losses and had workers on their books as far back as March 1.</p> <p>This means employers who have sacked (“let go of”) workers at any time in the past month can travel back in time, pay them as if they hadn’t been sacked, and nab the A$1,500 per employee per fortnight payment.</p> <p>As the official <a href="https://treasury.gov.au/sites/default/files/2020-03/Fact_sheet_supporting_businesses_1.pdf">fact sheet</a> puts it, “the JobKeeper Payment will support employers to maintain their connection to their employees”.</p> <p>This retrospective connection will add new meaning to the term “revision” when the March unemployment numbers are released.</p> <p>Not only will the March numbers be liable to being revised a month later as is normal in the light of extra information, but many Australians who were unemployed in March will retrospectively turn out not to have been unemployed.</p> <p>They will have been retrospectively in paid work.</p> <p> (And if they have applied for the Centrelink payment of Newstart plus <a href="https://theconversation.com/scalable-without-limit-how-the-government-plans-to-get-coronavirus-support-into-our-hands-quickly-134353">$550 per fortnight</a>, they’ll have to un-apply to avoid what the prime minister referred to as “double counting” rather than the more loaded “<a href="https://theconversation.com/hockey-under-the-pump-to-show-he-really-can-be-a-lifter-41584">double dipping</a>”.)</p> <p>It gets better. If you have been part-time, or for some other reason on <a href="https://treasury.gov.au/sites/default/files/2020-03/Fact_sheet_Info_for_Employees_0.pdf">less than</a> $1,500 per fortnight, “your employer must pay you, at a minimum, $1,500 per fortnight, before tax”.</p> <p>This means you’ll get a pay rise, for the six months the scheme lasts.</p> <p><em>Written by Peter Martin. Republished with permission of <a href="https://theconversation.com/the-key-to-the-success-of-the-130-billion-wage-subsidy-is-retrospective-paid-work-135042">The Conversation.</a></em></p>

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