Originally posted by LandRover
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Limited Company in IR35
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I thought the office holder argument was a slightly different kettle of fish to us? Was for the like of that senior guy at the student loans who had the ability to direct the organisation, not small LTD;s?'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!
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Actually, re-reading it it could be that "office holder" means someone who owns a limited company, i.e. all of us. Fook knows what goes on inside HMRC/the government's heads.Originally posted by northernladuk View PostI thought the office holder argument was a slightly different kettle of fish to us? Was for the like of that senior guy at the student loans who had the ability to direct the organisation, not small LTD;s?Contracting: more of the money, less of the sh1tComment
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See para 8 IR35 forum minutes Jan, HMRC have confirmed that's cock up not conspiracy.Originally posted by kingcook View PostActually, re-reading it it could be that "office holder" means someone who owns a limited company, i.e. all of us. Fook knows what goes on inside HMRC/the government's heads.Comment
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But I thought that argument had been had and it wasn't or did I miss something? I thought the company in question was the client.Originally posted by kingcook View PostActually, re-reading it it could be that "office holder" means someone who owns a limited company, i.e. all of us. Fook knows what goes on inside HMRC/the government's heads.
So far the definition is
from Contractors' Questions: Who are 'office holdersExpert’s Answer: Whilst there is no statutory definition of 'office holder', there is a judicial definition of 'office' that is referred to in HMRC's status manual as a 'permanent, substantive position which had an existence independent from the person who filled it, which went on and was filled in succession by successive holders.''CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!
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My understanding this is for public sector appointments and that an office holder is someone who on the governments pay scale is on the equivalent of a managerial grade. I think it was something around £223 a day. It applied if you are there for more than 6 months. My last gig was public sector and this had been brewing and they messed around getting my contract ready for review. I got given it on the last day of my previous 6 months, took the following monday off to get it reviewed and then didn't go back. There were too many red lights for me to say I was outside IR35. Not long after everyone else left when they were asked to provide evidence they were making their deemed payment or to subject themselves to HMRCs business entity tests.
a) Noone had made deemed payments as they up to that point had considered themselves outside IR35
b) If, for an example, you took the business entity test as a market trader, plumber, mobile car mechanic or even an IT contractor, you will come up as high risk, or medium if you do a few things like a business plan and your own invoicing. Unless you have done a subsitution, or lost 10% of your turn over on bad debt, or rent a premises you don't need, you can get enough points to be low risk.Signed sealed and delivered.Comment
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Why do I bother....
"Office Holder" in this context has legal force. It is someone who occupies a substantive and enduring post within an organsiation, such as MD, CEO, CIO, whatever, and who has a direct say in the operation of that organisaiton. Apart from a very few independent interim managers, a freelance consultant ain't it.
£220 a day is the bottom of the payscales for Senior Civil Servant (itself a defined role, come to that) divided by 260. It is a good indicator of the incompetence at the heart of hte Treasury that this has been set as the baseline. It should have been based on the cost of employment, not the headline salary, and should therefore be at least £450.
Finally, it's up to the individual department to decide how to implement the Alexander horsefeathers, many seem to be taking the pragmatic view, quite a few are over-egging it, Student Loans - who started it all - are seriously taking the mickey (but then, if they had any real business intelligence, they wouldn't have got themselves in that position in the first place)Blog? What blog...?
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