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Budget 2016: Businesses to receive cash “bonuses” for hiring young people and interns

SMEs may be eligible for cash bonuses if they offer internships or hire young job seekers as part of the federal government’s Youth Employment Package, announced tonight in the federal budget. At a cost of $840.3 million over four years, the package is aimed at getting 120,000 vulnerable people under the age of 25 into […]
Eloise Keating
Eloise Keating
Preparing young people for work: do we really have a crisis?

SMEs may be eligible for cash bonuses if they offer internships or hire young job seekers as part of the federal government’s Youth Employment Package, announced tonight in the federal budget.

At a cost of $840.3 million over four years, the package is aimed at getting 120,000 vulnerable people under the age of 25 into work.

The bulk of the funding ($751.7 million) will go towards the Youth Jobs PaTH program, which has three stages.

The first stage is a pre-employment skills training program that will give job seekers six weeks of training in areas such as IT, presentation, working in a team, job preparation and job hunting. This phase will begin in April 2017.

The second stage is a voluntary internship program, also beginning in April 2017, which will see businesses receive an up-front payment of $1000 to host an intern for between four and 12 weeks. Up to 30,000 placements will be supported each year, with the intern to receive payments of $200 a fortnight in addition to existing income support payments.

The third stage of the program, which will commence from January 2017, is a Youth Bonus wage subsidy that will give employers between $6,500 and $10,000 if they hire an eligible job seeker.

As part of the final stage, existing wages subsidies available to employers that hire youth, parents, indigenous and mature-age workers and the long-term unemployed will be “streamlined”.