Originally posted by bobspud
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Public sector contracting
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What's wrong with 3) - if you get the take-home you want, why care?Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishing -
Agreed. If someone is prepared to increase my rate for a 3 month extension to compensate, I'll take it and stick it in a pension.Originally posted by d000hg View PostWhat's wrong with 3) - if you get the take-home you want, why care?The material prosperity of a nation is not an abiding possession; the deeds of its people are.
George Frederic Watts
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postman's_ParkComment
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WHSOriginally posted by d000hg View PostWhat's wrong with 3) - if you get the take-home you want, why care?
I suspect it's more down to the psychological aspect of having to pay so much in tax and NI - and the fact that ClientCo were prepared to pay such an increased rate to begin with - which indicates a lost rate increase opportunity.
However, it's bottom line that counts. Put sentiment out of it - see it as a victory.Comment
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Whilst not having any of the rights or benefits of a permie, remember you're only a deemed permie for tax purposes you're not a legitimate employee. It's aggressive workers rights avoidance implemented by HMRCOriginally posted by d000hg View PostMaking one-man PSCs pay PAYE and employee NI would be just fine really. I mean I prefer to pay less but I can't really find a good reason that I should pay a smaller proportion of my income than a permie.Doing the needful since 1827Comment
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No a victory is booking tomorrow off and going to London for two interviews for roles paying more than I am on now. One of which has a potential for a longer term offer of a senior role paying proper permanent wages. (135k + car, health and 25% bonus) So if I am going to pay tax like a bitch I will be one and take the holidays and sick leave open to them...Originally posted by centurian View PostWHS
I suspect it's more down to the psychological aspect of having to pay so much in tax and NI - and the fact that ClientCo were prepared to pay such an increased rate to begin with - which indicates a lost rate increase opportunity.
However, it's bottom line that counts. Put sentiment out of it - see it as a victory.
I don't see that caving in to pay tax you are not due while having no employment rights is acceptable, it is certainly not a victory. Especially when it is just to appease a dumb procurement monkey that does not have the knowledge to understand or underwrite the contract that they signed in the first place.Comment
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Sorry but "not having the same rights as an employee" has nothing to do with paying the same amount of tax on your income, and everything to do with getting paid more than themOriginally posted by amcdonald View PostWhilst not having any of the rights or benefits of a permie, remember you're only a deemed permie for tax purposes you're not a legitimate employee. It's aggressive workers rights avoidance implemented by HMRC
Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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Three reasons, 1, you've now accepted HMRC's premise of being IR35 caught, 2, your next client probably wont pay as much since they arent public sector, 3, HMRC could potentially look into anyone who worked \ accepted IR35 principles in the public sector and is now contracting in the public sector.Originally posted by d000hg View PostWhat's wrong with 3) - if you get the take-home you want, why care?I couldn't give two fornicators! Yes, really!
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If your next contract isn't PS then you won't be IR35-caught then so rate is less important. Since you're talking about leaving PS now anyway you're just postponing the same choice.Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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Well it's only a victory if you land the role, otherwise it's a lost days invoicing. But genuinely best of luck on those roles anyway.Originally posted by bobspud View PostNo a victory is booking tomorrow off and going to London for two interviews for roles paying more than I am on now. One of which has a potential for a longer term offer of a senior role paying proper permanent wages. (135k + car, health and 25% bonus) So if I am going to pay tax like a bitch I will be one and take the holidays and sick leave open to them...
You're letting sentiment get in the way of sound business decisions. I only care about the bottom line. If a public sector outfit offered me a role paying an extra 50%+ on my current day rate, but was inside IR35, I would still take it. I only focus on the net value. The extra tax is just an additional expense of the contract, like travelling costs.Originally posted by bobspud View PostI don't see that caving in to pay tax you are not due while having no employment rights is acceptable, it is certainly not a victory. Especially when it is just to appease a dumb procurement monkey that does not have the knowledge to understand or underwrite the contract that they signed in the first place.Comment
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The difference being that IR35 prevents you storing money in the war chest for future bench time, sales effort, business development and training. That's the real problem with IR35, not the tax paid; it prevents you from fulfilling your duty as a director to operate the company efficiently and economically.Originally posted by centurian View PostWell it's only a victory if you land the role, otherwise it's a lost days invoicing. But genuinely best of luck on those roles anyway.
You're letting sentiment get in the way of sound business decisions. I only care about the bottom line. If a public sector outfit offered me a role paying an extra 50%+ on my current day rate, but was inside IR35, I would still take it. I only focus on the net value. The extra tax is just an additional expense of the contract, like travelling costs.Blog? What blog...?
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