Make Work Pay threatens employment and growth warns FSB
The government's Make Work Pay Bill lacks  a pro-growth element and will increase economic inactivity, the Federation of  Small Businesses (FSB) has warned.
The business group says that the  legislation, particularly around day one dismissal rights, risks deterring  small employers from taking a chance on someone who has had a significant  period out of the workplace, shutting those doors and deepening social exclusion
It warns that the Bill is rushed and  poorly planned while dropping 28 new measures onto small business employers all  at once leaves them scrambling to make sense of it all.
There are already 65,000 fewer payroll  jobs since Labour took power, and the new government is sending out a  'troubling signal to businesses and investors', the FSB adds.
Tina McKenzie, Policy Chair at the FSB,  said:
'The  Chancellor has the opportunity to lead the way in adding a pro-business,  pro-employment element to Make Work Pay in her upcoming Budget. This should  include a rise in the Employment Allowance, pegging it to future rises in the  National Living Wage. It should also include the reintroduction of the small  business rebate for Statutory Sick Pay.
'Sufficient  time should be taken to avoid this becoming a hastily cobbled-together Act of  Parliament. We look forward to more engagement and the start of a full  consultation on each individual measure to ensure the voice of small employers  is heard.'
Internet links: FSB