![]() |
| Koolmees, Hoekstra and Wiebes during the press conference. Photo: Phil Nijhuis ANP |
The cabinet is expanding the scheme to help companies pay the wages of
workers who have been laid off because of the coronavirus crisis and will help
bail out freelancers whose income has dried up.
The new measures were announced
by finance minister Wopke Hoekstra, economic affairs minister Erik Wiebes and
employment minister Wouter Koolmees at a press conference in The Hague on
Tuesday evening.
‘Our aim is to limit the economic effects so that people keep
their jobs and an income and that the companies stay intact,’ finance minister
Wopke Hoekstra said. ‘But we have to be honest and we cannot rule out some
companies not making it.’
The ruling for paying benefits
to staff who have been laid off is being replaced by a new one under which the
government will fund 90% of salaries.The measure is also being expanded to
cover people on zero hour or call-out contracts, who have been left with no
income at all in some sectors.
Some 78,000 companies have already applied for
funding under the old scheme since coronavirus erupted, causing the website to
crash on at least two occasions. ‘The new scheme is now being worked on day and
night, so please be patient,’ Koolmees said.
The cabinet is also expanding the
credit options for small and medium-sized firms and will make it easier for
freelancers to claim benefits to top up their income if their contracts dry up.
‘There will be no partner or asset check in this and the money will not have to
be repaid,’ Koolmees said. However, the new system still has to be put in place
and freelancers should not apply to local authorities for help immediately, but
wait for further details, Koolmees said.
Companies and freelancers will also be
able to delay tax payments without having to pay fines and there will be an
emergency payout of up to €4,000 for companies which have been hardest hit,
such as the hospitality industry, travel and cultural sectors.
In total, the
package will add up to €10bn to €20bn over the next three months, but the total
depends on how many firms apply for help, Hoekstra said. ‘We remain realistic
and it will not be easy, but during this period we have to work together to get
through this.’
Shops
The economic fall-out of coronavirus continues to be felt.
Although non-food shops have not been closed, many are adjusting their opening
hours and Ikea has said it is closing all its Dutch branches because ‘the
health of staff and customers is a top priority’.
Taxi drivers are also
suffering, with Uber drivers reporting plummeting incomes. One driver from The
Hague told the Volkskrant he had earned €1,382 a week from 92 journeys at the
start of the month but that had fallen to €485 from 42 trips a week ago. On
Tuesday morning he had earned nothing.
Many Uber drivers use leased cars and
some are paying up to €900 a week for their vehicles and now face financial
ruin, the Volkskrant said. Others are concerned that they are being exposed to
customers who carry the virus.
Uber told the paper that the company is
supporting drivers who are diagnosed with coronavirus or are placed in
quarantine and is in talks with lease companies and insurers about showing
leniency to drivers who have been hard hit financially.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.