Cashflow Boost Returns for NSW
NSW businesses will now receive
up to $10,000 per week under a new support measure modelled off 2020’s cash
flow boost payment, Prime Minister Scott Morrison has announced.
The new measure will be
available from next week- the fourth week of Greater Sydney’s lockdown- and
will see eligible businesses receive a minimum of $1,500 and a maximum of
$10,000 per week.
It will be available to
non-employing and employing entities in NSW, including not for profits, with an
annual turnover between $75,000 and $50 million.
Entities will be eligible if
their turnover is 30 per cent lower than an equivalent two-week period in 2019.
The payment rate will be based
on 40 per cent of their NSW payroll payments. Non-employing businesses, such as
sole traders will see the payment capped at $1,000 each week.
To receive the payment,
entities will be required to maintain their full time, part time and long term
casual staffing level as of 13 July.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison
said the new payments were modelled off the cash flow boost measure that was
introduced at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic last year but will be jointly
funded between the Commonwealth and New South Wales.
“What we’ve learnt during the
pandemic is you do what works. When you need to do it again, you do what
works,” said Mr Morrison.
“The support that’s been
provided through this cash flow boost is not only commensurate with what was
provided last time, but in most cases it’s actually greater because it needs to
be more concentrated.
“It’s kicking in in week four
and it will go for as long as the lockdown requires.”
NSW treasurer Dominic Perrottet
also revealed that micro businesses earning more than $30,000 but less than
$75,000 would also receive a backdated $1,500 per fortnight payment from week
one of the lockdown if they have seen a 30 per cent reduction in turnover.
Payroll tax liabilities will
also be deferred for two months.
Disaster
payments boosted
Mr Morrison also announced an
increase to the COVID disaster payment, which has been bumped from $500 to $600
for those who work more than 20 hours each week, and from $325 to $375 for
those who have lost between “eight and 20 hours a week”.
The payment’s eligibility
criteria has been broadened to include all residents of NSW, too, and is no
longer limited to those under lockdown in regions declared hotspots by the
Commonwealth. The broadened scope of the payment, however, is limited to
residents of NSW, as its cost will be offset by the state government.
“The NSW outbreak has proved to
be more severe, more dangerous, and it’s in the national interest that we now
put in place an upgraded set of arrangements for cooperation with the states
and territories,” Mr Morrison said. “Within that, we will first be put in place
here with NSW when lockdowns enter into more protracted situations.”
Mr Perrottet has also announced
additional state support to both residential and commercial tenants as part of
the announcement as well. The treasurer announced a land tax rebate to
commercial landlords in a bid to stave off commercial evictions.
“We want to encourage retailers
right across NSW to work with landlords to make sure that we all get through
this difficult time together,” he said.
The state will also provide
residential tenancy protections by ruling out any evictions for the next 60
days for workers who have seen an income reduction of at least 25 per cent, and
are “doing it tough”. The same land tax rebates will be made to residential
landlords, too.
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