News
HM Revenue & Customs publishes further details of the Job Support Scheme
14 October 2020
HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) has published further details of the Job Support Scheme (JSS), announced by the Chancellor during his Winter Economy Statement in Parliament on 24 September.
The JSS is intended to support businesses facing reduced demand over the winter as a result of the Coronavirus crisis, helping to keep employees in ‘viable’ jobs on short-time working.
The scheme will launch on 1 November 2020 – the day after the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (CJRS) closes – and will run for six months until the end of April 2021.
It will be open to all SMEs, but will only be available to large businesses that can show that they have been adversely affected by the Coronavirus crisis through reduced revenues. Large businesses will be expected not to make capital distributions, including dividends or share buybacks, while using the JSS.
Employees claimed for through the JSS must have been on an employer’s PAYE payroll on 23 September 2020, meaning their employer must have included them on an RTI submission on or before that date.
They cannot be on notice of redundancy or be made redundant while in receipt of the JSS.
Employees must work at least 33 per cent of their usual hours and be paid in full for those hours by their employer.
The employer must also then pay one-third of the hours not worked – an amount which will be matched by the Government up to a cap of £697.92 a month.
Employees will then forego pay for one-third of the usual hours that they are not working. This means they will be paid at least 77 per cent of their usual wages, even if they are only working 33 per cent of their usual hours.
Employers meanwhile, would pay a total of 55 per cent of an employee’s usual wages in return for 33 per cent of their usual hours.
Therefore, it could cost an employer less to dismiss two staff and keep one working full-time, rather than having three staff on short-time working through the JSS. The scheme has similar implications, even where employees are working a much larger proportion of their usual hours.
HMRC has published a table, setting out how the scheme will work at different levels of short-time working:
Hours Employee Worked | 33 per cent | 40 per cent | 50 per cent | 60 per cent | 70 per cent |
Hours Employee Not Working | 67 per cent | 60 per cent | 50 per cent | 40 per cent | 30 per cent |
Employee Earnings | 78 per cent | 80 per cent | 83 per cent | 87 per cent | 90 per cent |
Gov’t Grant | 22 per cent | 20 per cent | 17 per cent | 13 per cent | 10 per cent |
Employer Cost | 55 per cent | 60 per cent | 67 per cent | 73 per cent | 80 per cent |
Employers will need to agree short-time working arrangements with staff affected and make any necessary changes to contracts of employment, with documents made available to HMRC on request.
HMRC says that it intends to notify employees directly with full details of the claims made in respect of them.
Case Studies
-
A taste for growth, a thirst for knowledge
-
A shared passion for architecture and a head for numbers
-
Taxing demands with old school charm
-
Cut above the rest in personal management style
-
Smiles all round for dental practice
-
Customer care is top of the list for packaging business
-
A modern approach required for music moguls
-
Sometimes a business does exactly as it says on the tin
-
Child's play with proactive accounts management