Skip to content
Breaking

COVID-19: Economy will be unlocked 'gradually' after English schools reopen, says vaccines minister

Tory MPs are upping the pressure on Chancellor Rishi Sunak to push for opening up to happen as soon as possible.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

'Gradual reopening of economy' hoped for
Why you can trust Sky News

England's economy will be unlocked gradually after schools hopefully return at the start of March, the vaccines minister has told Sky News.

Nadhim Zahawi gave an insight into what Prime Minister Boris Johnson's promised roadmap out of lockdown, earmarked to be announced on 22 February, will look like.

He confirmed the government intends to start reopening schools in England on 8 March, to allow immunity against COVID-19 to build up among the top four groups prioritised for a jab.

Live COVID updates from the UK and around the world

General view of signage at St John's near Woking, Surrey. Residents in a part of Surrey are to be urgently tested for Covid-19 after it emerged the South African strain of the virus may have started spreading in the community. Two positive cases of the strain - which has been worrying scientists - have been identified in people with no links to travel or previous contact with those affected. Picture date: Monday February 1, 2021.

And in a suggestion the government wants to get the economy moving as soon as possible, he added more restrictions could then be lifted.

"Mid-February, if you add another three weeks to that when the vaccine protection really does begin to kick in, you're at the first week of March," he said on Thursday.

"So that's when we will begin to first of all open schools and then begin a gradual reopening of the economy, if we continue to see good data."

More from Covid-19

He added lockdown being eased is "predicated on really high quality data" of hospitalisation rates coming down and the falling of deaths, which he added "still remain far too high" and are at a "grim" level.

Schools have been closed for the majority of pupils during England's third lockdown
Image: Schools could open from 8 March in England

It comes as The Daily Telegraph reported Chancellor Rishi Sunak is worried scientists were shifting their advice on when lockdown should end.

The paper quoted one source who said: "Rishi is concerned that the scientists have been moving the goalposts in recent weeks. It's no longer just about hospitalisations and protecting the NHS but cases and case numbers.

"Now the target seems to be that we need to keep cases down overall, which wasn't the original aim of the lockdown... The talk has switched to becoming COVID-free."

Steve Baker, deputy chair of the COVID Recovery Group - a lobbying effort by Tory backbenchers against restrictions they deem too tough - also responded to the report by calling Mr Sunak "potentially our best chancellor ever".

Tory backbenchers have begun raising fresh concerns after Nicola Sturgeon announced schools in Scotland could return from 22 February - triggering questions about why the country is moving faster than England.

Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak puts on a face covering due to the COVID-19 pandemic, as enters the BBC in central London on November 22, 2020, to take appear on the BBC political programme The Andrew Marr Show. - Britain's debt is now at its highest level since 1961 as a share of GDP, after the government embarked on a massive spending spree to mitigate the economic effects of the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic and resulting lockdowns. (Photo by Tolga Akmen / AFP) (Photo by TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images)
Image: The chancellor is facing calls from some to push for the economy to open soon

Marcus Fysh, a Conservative MP, said Mr Sunak's reported concerns were "quite right", adding: "As soon as vulnerable groups have been vaccinated and their immunity has spun up (14 days) we must open the economy completely and return to normal."

Several ministers have privately expressed concerns that some decisions are overly cautious at the moment.

And they expressed worry the cabinet so-called "doves" - those in favour of tougher restrictions - like Health Secretary Matt Hancock and Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove, are a bit too dominant in decision-making.

It comes after a further 1,322 people died withing 28 days of testing positive for coronavirus and 19,202 people more people tested positive.

Just over 10 million people have also now had their first dose of a COVID-19 shot.

Mr Zahawi also said vaccine manufacturers are already planning to tweak their jabs to be more effective at tackling variants, of which there are around 4,000 worldwide.