Seeing as I am starting to come to the realization that 99.9% of contractors are going to be deemed inside, because that is how the entire IR35 has been designed.
Are managed services providers also going to be seen as inside?
For example BT or another large managed service provider has a contract to upgrade a bit of software and they place an employee of theirs on site 35 hours a week for 12 months. That employee can be replaced by other staff within BT but he is not replaced for another employee over the 6 month period because that employee is a specialist in the software that that client requires and BT put no one on site for the days when the employee is not available. The employee also does not do any other work over the 12 month period for other clients.
If large managed services providers are exempt from IR35, then how is that reasonable or consistent?
If they are not deemed inside, then IR35 is going to seriously disrupt the competition in the managed service industry because every MSP started out as a limited company with one employee and grew from there.
Are managed services providers also going to be seen as inside?
For example BT or another large managed service provider has a contract to upgrade a bit of software and they place an employee of theirs on site 35 hours a week for 12 months. That employee can be replaced by other staff within BT but he is not replaced for another employee over the 6 month period because that employee is a specialist in the software that that client requires and BT put no one on site for the days when the employee is not available. The employee also does not do any other work over the 12 month period for other clients.
If large managed services providers are exempt from IR35, then how is that reasonable or consistent?
If they are not deemed inside, then IR35 is going to seriously disrupt the competition in the managed service industry because every MSP started out as a limited company with one employee and grew from there.
Comment