Originally posted by Fungus
I think your experience is highly subjective. I can tell you by personal experiences that sometimes it's the opposite situation. I think you cannot generalise and that always depends on the environment and how you fit in that.
You might be able to avoid IR35 especially if you can do some work at home. An accountant is only £800 per year. Pension contributions from a permie job are not that much.
In terms of job security, my last client was laying off permies, and I worked there longer than many other staff, so the job security thing is often crap. These days many companies treat permies as contractors. In fact some prefer contractors due to flexibility. High and fire according to skill requirements, with no redundancy pay or legal crap.
In terms of job security, my last client was laying off permies, and I worked there longer than many other staff, so the job security thing is often crap. These days many companies treat permies as contractors. In fact some prefer contractors due to flexibility. High and fire according to skill requirements, with no redundancy pay or legal crap.
The only problem is that as a permie you might be able to live near your employer, but as a contractor you will probably have to commute quite a bit, or live in some form of digs.
Oh, and the taxman detests us lot. despite the fact that we perform a valuable economic function. And some permies detest us too. They are sad gets who are jealous but without the nerve to do what we do.
Leif
Oh, and the taxman detests us lot. despite the fact that we perform a valuable economic function. And some permies detest us too. They are sad gets who are jealous but without the nerve to do what we do.
Leif
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