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United Nations IPSA Contract

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    #11
    Originally posted by northernladuk View Post

    I thought I highlighted the important bit so we didn't have to go down the VAT rabbit hole?
    You may have thought so (and for that reason) . However, we cannot see the contract and self-employed people must register for VAT when they first know that they will exceed the threshold.

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      #12
      Ok, so speaking to someone who is already on one of these.

      Their opinion is that you get paid a wodge of cash in dollars based on a monthly rate, you then take care of tax your end.

      This to me seems strange - I can see how I can account for income tax as part of self assessment perhaps, but that doesn't take account of NI.
      Cenedl heb iaith, cenedl heb galon

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        #13
        Originally posted by Bluebird View Post
        Ok, so speaking to someone who is already on one of these.

        Their opinion is that you get paid a wodge of cash in dollars based on a monthly rate, you then take care of tax your end.

        This to me seems strange - I can see how I can account for income tax as part of self assessment perhaps, but that doesn't take account of NI.
        So you'll be self-employed in HMRC terms, so this is where you need to look:
        https://www.gov.uk/self-employed-nat...nsurance-rates

        You'll pay it via self-assessment

        Comment


          #14
          Originally posted by ladymuck View Post

          So you'll be self-employed in HMRC terms, so this is where you need to look:
          https://www.gov.uk/self-employed-nat...nsurance-rates

          You'll pay it via self-assessment
          Thanks - thats exactly the info I was looking for!
          Cenedl heb iaith, cenedl heb galon

          Comment


            #15
            Do i assume that on that link that HMRC have got a word wrong:

            You usually pay 2 types of National Insurance if you’re self-employed:
            • Class 2 if your profits are more than £11,908 a year
            • Class 4 if your profits are £11,909 or more a year

            Should class 2 be LESS than 11908?
            Cenedl heb iaith, cenedl heb galon

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              #16
              No, the wording is correct as of 2022/23, if a bit clumsy. It's moving to both being aligned with the income tax threshold in 2023/24.

              Comment


                #17
                Originally posted by jamesbrown View Post
                No, the wording is correct as of 2022/23, if a bit clumsy. It's moving to both being aligned with the income tax threshold in 2023/24.
                Don't get it - they both mention a value being applied if OVER a specific figure - but the figure is the same bar £1.

                So if my profits are less that £11,908 a year - I pay nothing?

                If my profits are £30k - do I pay £3.15 a week, or 9.73% of £19,092 ( £0 - 11908 ) or both?
                Cenedl heb iaith, cenedl heb galon

                Comment


                  #18
                  Originally posted by Bluebird View Post

                  Don't get it - they both mention a value being applied if OVER a specific figure - but the figure is the same bar £1.

                  So if my profits are less that £11,908 a year - I pay nothing?

                  If my profits are £30k - do I pay £3.15 a week, or 9.73% of £19,092 ( £0 - 11908 ) or both?
                  Both. The first sentence says "two classes of NI are paid". The class 4 kicks in at £1 higher than class 2.

                  Agreed, it makes very little sense.

                  I'm sure there's historical documentation somewhere explaining why someone thought it was a good idea.

                  Comment


                    #19
                    Originally posted by Bluebird View Post

                    Don't get it - they both mention a value being applied if OVER a specific figure - but the figure is the same bar £1.

                    So if my profits are less that £11,908 a year - I pay nothing?

                    If my profits are £30k - do I pay £3.15 a week, or 9.73% of £19,092 ( £0 - 11908 ) or both?
                    As far as I can see, it's just clumsy phrasing with a > £11,908 and >= £11,909, both of those being practically the same. As I said, they are moving both to the income tax threshold in the next tax year. But as LM says, it's both.

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