Originally posted by Smartie
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Umbrella companies to be abolished
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Labour pledges to ban umbrella companies.
Still reeling .... :-s
Labour pledges to ban umbrella companies :: Contractor UKComment
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Originally posted by Snorky View PostComment
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Originally posted by PurpleGorilla View PostI've always said this, absolutely for 5-10 years it's going to hurt. But then things should pick up.
Even if we stayed in, we'd still be going into some hard times due to the ponzi economy.
It will be interesting to see if the UK unshackled does better than the Eurozone in the next financial crisis...Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ hereComment
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Originally posted by chopper View PostHow?
Surely the whole point of an umbrella company is that the worker pays the full whack of tax and NICs?
The target of this legislation is deliveroo drivers earning **** all and getting no rights. The sledgehammer used to crack the nut will mean proper freelancers get collared also.
However, I'm really not so sure the Tories also don't have visions on the same. I don't use an Umbrella, so this doesn't impact me. ;-)
My problem with umbrellas is that the emphasis is on the employee to cover all taxes, which takes allows the client/'employer' off the hook. If a 350 pd rate really meant that, and the employee paid employee taxes on that, it would annoy me less, but the fact the employee also covers employer NI, plus the now extra 0.5% levy, that is a 'p' take. Maybe Labour feel the same?
Either way, whoever wins, it's all changing and we are in the middle of the coming stormI am what I drink, and I'm a bitter manComment
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Originally posted by Whorty View PostSeems to me the aim to get rid of umbrellas is to either make people work as employees, FTCs or for the very few, stay limited. Labour likes it's low paid workers in the public sector so they can 'encourage' them to join their unions, something the low paid are not likely to do when in an umbrella.
My problem with umbrellas is that the emphasis is on the employee to cover all taxes, which takes allows the client/'employer' off the hook. If a 350 pd rate really meant that, and the employee paid employee taxes on that, it would annoy me less, but the fact the employee also covers employer NI, plus the now extra 0.5% levy, that is a 'p' take. Maybe Labour feel the same?
Either way, whoever wins, it's all changing and we are in the middle of the coming storm
Note I'm not saying that umbrella's will be banned the attack will be on agencies and how the advertise pay - umbrellas will just be hit by the consequences...
And the Taylor review recommendations will be implemented in full - any changes need to be lobbied for before its published....merely at clientco for the entertainmentComment
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Originally posted by Smartie View PostLate to this party http://forums.contractoruk.com/gener...abolished.html
Labour pledges to ban umbrella companies :: Contractor UKComment
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Something needs to be done, though it will feel historically weird if it's Labour trying* to promote efficiency rather than the tories.
Currently off-payroll rules are pushing public sector to have:
Client -> Capita CL1 -> Agency -> Umbrella, all taking their cut and the end result is contractor needs 30%+ rate increase to stay on similar 'take home' after all that, and PS client having to cover that increase if they want to continue to attract the better talent away from the private sector.
All of the links in that chain will have payroll facilities for their own staff so why not just have the client do it all, or client/Capita for PS if that's what they want to do to centralise it?
The agency and umbrella seems to add no real value to the chain.
* Though their election manifest is full of massive borrowing to 'fix' things that could be less expensively fixed by cutting out all the inefficiency and troughing, something any government struggles to do almost as if they have a vested interest somehow.Maybe tomorrow, I'll want to settle down. Until tomorrow, I'll just keep moving on.Comment
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Originally posted by Hobosapien View PostSomething needs to be done, though it will feel historically weird if it's Labour trying* to promote efficiency rather than the tories.
I don't know if May abolishes umbrellas, but I certainly would not be surprised - let's not forget about new NICs sneaked in under the guise of "auto-enrollment", this tulip works best if people are employees working directly for company: it's very important for "Tories" that this pension scam goes through as smoothly as possible.Comment
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