Federal Budget 2022: How apprentice tradies can pocket $5k cash
Apprentices and the businesses that take them on will receive generous cash payments as the government tries to entice people into priority areas.
In demand apprentices will bank a $5000 cash payment but a generous wage subsidy for their bosses will be steadily trimmed as the government rejigs its support for the trades sector.
Small medium-sized businesses will also be provided with a bonus tax deduction for training workers while a $2.2b ideas factory will have a key focus in developing a new generation of manufacturers.
The government will invest $2.8b over five years from 2021-22 to boost apprentice numbers, upskill those already in industry and reduce drop out rates.
It is also offering an extra $3.7b to state and territory governments to fund a new national skills agreement which aims to create a further 800,000 training places.
A new $2.4b Australian Apprenticeships Incentives System will provide a $5,000 payment to new apprentices working in priority areas such as construction and carpentry.
It will be paid in $1,250 instalments every six months for the first two years of an apprenticeship.
A separate wage subsidy for their bosses will cover 10 per cent of a first- and second-year apprentice wage and 5 per cent of a third-year’s wage, providing up to $15,000 in support.
A new apprenticeships priority list will outline the roles which will attract the subsidy and be updated annually.
Employers of apprentices in nonpriority occupations will receive a $3,500 hiring incentive.
Another $38.6m will be provided to encourage more women to undertake non-traditional apprenticeships while $49.5m will be spent to boost the aged-care workforce by 15,000 people.
The cash bonus and wage subsidy will run from July to July 2024 when government support will be cut to provide priority apprentices with a $3000 bonus and their bosses a $4000 hiring incentive.
The new system will replace the current scheme – to end in June – which provides employers with a 50 per cent wage subsidy worth up to $28,000 a year for a first-year apprentice.
The system has been enthusiastically backed by major employer groups who credit it with spurring a boom in apprentice numbers, reversing a worrying eight-year decline.
In other key training measures, businesses with annual turnover less than $50 million will be able to claim a new bonus 20 per cent tax deduction for the cost of external training courses delivered to their employees.
The break will allow a business which has spent $100 on training to claim a $120 tax deduction, up to a cap of $100,000.
It is expected to provide around $550m in tax relief to business covering 7.8m workers.
A $2.2b federal fund will work to transform big ideas at universities into successful global businesses, with a $1.6b “economic accelerator” to back ventures in sectors including clean energy, medical supplies and defence.
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Originally published as Federal Budget 2022: How apprentice tradies can pocket $5k cash