The
Temporary COVID-19 Wage Subsidy Scheme provided for employers and employees of
Ireland in the extraordinary circumstances of the
spread of the coronavirus pandemic. The scheme allowed employers to maintain responsibility for paying employees during the pandemic, with the intention of maintaining the employer-employee relationship and ensuring that employees continued to be registered with their employers, so that they would be able to get back to work quickly after the pandemic. The scheme was announced on 24 March for a twelve-week run beginning on 26 March, and replaced an earlier
COVID-19 Employer Refund Scheme. By early April, the
Central Statistics Office (CSO) announced that a figure equivalent to more than one tenth of the country's population were unemployed, with nearly 5% of that figure on the Temporary COVID-19 Wage Subsidy Scheme. A spokesman for
Goodbody Stockbrokers described it as "unprecedented". By the following week, the numbers receiving income supports had increased by 40% from the previous week's total, though the closing of thousands of applications for the
COVID-19 Pandemic Unemployment Payment meant it was "presumed" their employers had rehired them through the Temporary COVID-19 Wage Subsidy Scheme. By mid-May, a figure equivalent to nearly one tenth of the country's population were on the Temporary COVID-19 Wage Subsidy Scheme alone. On 6 May,
Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe told
Morning Ireland that the scheme would continue "in some form" past its original intended date of ending. On 15 April, Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe announced changes to the scheme such that the State would pay more money to workers. On 19 May, Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe said a decision would be made "soon" regarding an extension of the scheme. On 5 June, Minister for Finance Paschal Donohue announced that the scheme would be extended until the end of August. Even a State-owned company,
RTÉ, sought to participate in the scheme. Women returning from giving birth were excluded from the scheme; they were advised to apply for social welfare instead. On 23 July, as part of the
July Jobs Stimulus package announced by the Government, the scheme would be replaced by the Employment Wage Support Scheme from September 2020 and would run until April 2021. ==Employment Wage Subsidy Scheme==