Article 52WH2 The Guardian view on corporate bailouts: money for something | Editorial

The Guardian view on corporate bailouts: money for something | Editorial

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Editorial
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Big businesses will soon be asking taxpayers for even more financial support. Let's set out principles for who should get funds and how

One day, a billionaire; the next, a human dartboard. The attacks on Sir Richard Branson after he implored the UK government to give a 500m bailout to his Virgin Atlantic airline have been sharp and stinging. To the tycoon they must also have been unsurprising, since he knows there are powerful criticisms of state handouts to big business. Indeed, some have been made by none other than Sir Richard Branson. When, in 2009, arch-rival British Airways begged Gordon Brown's government for help, he opposed any such intervention. We should wait for its demise," he proposed, arguing that loss-making and inefficient airlines should be allowed to go to the wall".

Barely a decade later, the businessman appears to have changed his mind and so gifted the world a case study in hubris. Yet the huffing and puffing over this one heavily branded mendicant should not drown out a more significant fact: many big businesses will soon be knocking on Rishi Sunak's door asking if the chancellor can spare a few hundred million. That will be on top of the hundreds of billions already set aside for loans, grants and support for industries such as fishing. Companies that may have been perfectly sound before this pandemic have now run aground; others that were struggling in 2019 now face complete collapse. The question for Westminster is which companies to support and on what terms. Which makes now a vital time to set out some principles for such bailouts.

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