Originally posted by LisaContractorUmbrella
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I could live with it if they say engagers have to declare / report a contract as inside or outside, and that engagers are held liable if they report it outside and it is found inside. It would be an additional reporting burden on engagers that they won't like. But at least it would still allow us, within IR35, to make SOME decisions as to how we are going to operate. And if a client decides to play it safe and declare everything inside, well, I'd expect a higher fee. Why should I earn less (net) because the client wants to play it safe? Fair enough, I can live with that scenario.
But if I can't even mitigate the damage by making pension contributions, because the client is operating PAYE on everything they pay my company, then I'm looking for an even higher fee.
To me, this is the worst case. It means employee and employer NI will be paid on my pension contributions. As a general rule, I don't work on site. So the expenses thing, which is reprehensible, won't hit me personally very much. And I'm in a position to be able to tell clients they are going to pay for it if they throw me into IR35. But if they actually force me onto client payroll, it's going to cost a lot. Think both employee and employer NI on £40K.
And I can't imagine that this will sit well with clients, either. They have to put someone on payroll for three months, or six months? Get P45s? Deduct the 5%? Etc? Engagers will hate this. They want someone to come in, do a job for a few months, get paid well for it, and then go away. They don't want paperwork, payroll, etc, etc.
This is yet another "idea" that hasn't been thought through. Idiots.
If they weren't idiots, they would recognise that their dividend tax has significantly reduced the difference between being inside or outside IR35. So there is a lot less incentive to cheat on it, and a lot less to be gained by doing stupid things that cost businesses even more red tape and reduce their flexibility even more. When you are already bringing IR35 in by the back door (dividend tax), it's stupid to break down the building to try and force it through the front door.
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