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Opinionopinion

We need a new Enterprise Allowance Scheme to help fire the recovery

Failure to provide such support to start-ups has been one of the few mistakes made by Chancellor Rishi Sunak

Former chancellor Sajid Javid

At a time when governments are looking for radical new ideas to deal with the looming unemployment crisis that many economists still believe is inevitable, few would have thought that we go back to the early 1980s for solutions to the economic slowdown caused by the Covid pandemic.

Perhaps the greatest irony is that as the Future Generations Commissioner for Wales Sophie Howe proposed the introduction of a Universal Basic Income as one potential way forward, there has also been a call to resurrect a free market scheme started under Margaret Thatcher that was already a model, thirty seven years ago, for a basic income for entrepreneurs.

Earlier this week, a paper from the Policy Exchange thinktank suggested the reintroduction of the Enterprise Allowance Scheme (EAS) to encourage more people to consider self-employment as a response to the potential jobs losses from the current recession.

When the EAS was introduced in 1983, it provided support to out-of-work claimants who wanted to start their own business although they also needed to have a viable business plan and £1,000 of initial capital for the business. In return, they were provided with a weekly allowance of £40 and access to business advice, mentoring and other support.

With the former Chancellor Sajid Javid among the authors of the paper, it argued that the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government should consider a new 2020 Enterprise Allowance Scheme which would be open to anyone with a viable business idea who is not currently employed.

Of course, there have been other attempts to reintroduce such a programme and the 2010 coalition government brought in a New Enterprise Allowance (NEA). Unfortunately, this was a poor facsimile of its predecessor due to various restrictions but had a number of additional features such as the availability of a start-up loan worth up to £25,000.

Not surprisingly, Mr Javid and his co-authors argued that this scheme has never been fit for purpose for a number of reasons.

For example, it only pays out for six months which is too short a time to start a business successfully in difficult economic circumstances. In addition, whilst the allowance itself is not affected by the income generated by the business, the claimant’s universal credit is gradually withdrawn once the business is trading and this affects the income of the individual just as they are focusing on starting their new venture.