• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

Public sector contracting

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Originally posted by BolshieBastard View Post
    Pimp said he had lots of interest in the job at the rate quoted plus he's never heard of this IR35 and the public sector (oh aye!) clampdown.
    He has now!

    Comment


      Since new year, I've had nothing but recruiters and agencies offering me NHS work. Looks like a lot of contractors might have gotten out before Christmas

      Comment


        Had a return investigated? You may never be able to take a public sector contract again!

        Companies guilty of tax avoidance to be banned from major Government contracts - Telegraph

        The rules will require all firms and individuals bidding for contracts to declare whether their tax returns have been rejected because of involvement in a tax avoidance scheme.

        And firms will also have to sign a clause in contracts allowing departments to terminate the agreement if they are later found to have breached tax compliance obligations.

        Announcing the plans in a written statement to Parliament, Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander described the changes - due to come into effect on April 1 - as "another significant tool (which) will provide a framework to enable Government departments to say no to firms bidding for Government contracts where they have been involved in failed tax avoidance".

        Under the new regime, suppliers bidding for contracts will be required to inform Government departments if any tax return has recently been found to be incorrect as a result of an HM Revenue and Customs challenge under anti-avoidance and anti-abuse rules or due to involvement in a failed avoidance scheme.

        Successful bidders will be contractually obliged to tell departments if they are found in breach of tax obligations after winning a contract.
        I couldn't give two fornicators! Yes, really!

        Comment


          Originally posted by BolshieBastard View Post
          Had a return investigated? You may never be able to take a public sector contract again!

          Companies guilty of tax avoidance to be banned from major Government contracts - Telegraph

          The rules will require all firms and individuals bidding for contracts to declare whether their tax returns have been rejected because of involvement in a tax avoidance scheme.

          And firms will also have to sign a clause in contracts allowing departments to terminate the agreement if they are later found to have breached tax compliance obligations.

          Announcing the plans in a written statement to Parliament, Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander described the changes - due to come into effect on April 1 - as "another significant tool (which) will provide a framework to enable Government departments to say no to firms bidding for Government contracts where they have been involved in failed tax avoidance".

          Under the new regime, suppliers bidding for contracts will be required to inform Government departments if any tax return has recently been found to be incorrect as a result of an HM Revenue and Customs challenge under anti-avoidance and anti-abuse rules or due to involvement in a failed avoidance scheme.

          Successful bidders will be contractually obliged to tell departments if they are found in breach of tax obligations after winning a contract.
          I wonder if fiddling expenses is deemed to be 'tax avoidance'
          Connect with me on LinkedIn

          Follow us on Twitter.

          ContractorUK Best Forum Advisor 2015

          Comment


            Up for renewal soon...are departments accepting the professional reviews?

            So...in about 6 weeks or so, me and about 50 other contractors in the department will be up for renewal and many of us will get a capita contract with the new wording for the first time.

            I'm thinking of getting a qdos type review...have any of my fellow public sector contractors on here through capita managed to get their department to confirm in writing that they accept the qdos (or other professional review) as sufficient evidence that the contract operates outside of IR35 and that the public sector off payroll rules therefore don't apply? I want to get certainty of the position ahead of the renewal and if the departments are confirming everything's in order now rather than waiting for a 'random inspection' then a professional review sounds like money well spent...
            Cheers
            B

            Comment


              The best advice is on the PCG site and still stands. Most departments, apart from Student Loans, who started the whole sorry debacle off, seem to be willing to accept external IR35 assessments but it is an on-going discussion..
              Blog? What blog...?

              Comment


                Originally posted by malvolio View Post
                The best advice is on the PCG site and still stands. Most departments, apart from Student Loans, who started the whole sorry debacle off, seem to be willing to accept external IR35 assessments but it is an on-going discussion..
                Thanks

                Mal (and others) - any experience of Cabinet Office's stance on this specifically?

                Comment


                  Originally posted by bracken View Post
                  Thanks

                  Mal (and others) - any experience of Cabinet Office's stance on this specifically?
                  It's not the Cabinet Office, it's a mix of BIS and the Treasury. And last I heard we weren't getting any coherent answers. PCG are still pressing the question directly and through the IR35 Forum and issuing FOIs, so keep an eye on their website.
                  Blog? What blog...?

                  Comment


                    Cabinet Office

                    Originally posted by malvolio View Post
                    It's not the Cabinet Office, it's a mix of BIS and the Treasury. And last I heard we weren't getting any coherent answers. PCG are still pressing the question directly and through the IR35 Forum and issuing FOIs, so keep an eye on their website.
                    The Cabinet Office is the main body that oversees all of this and they issued the guidance to all the other departments. The problem is that it is for each department to decide how to implement the guidance. BIS is a large body with about 40 agencies and they appear to have taken the stance of "inside IR35" as the default position. All departments are due to report back in the next few weeks so we need to watch carefully the governments response (if any) to the statistics they have gathered.
                    Kate Cottrell

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by Kate Cottrell View Post
                      The Cabinet Office is the main body that oversees all of this and they issued the guidance to all the other departments.
                      Kate - Thats my understanding too and given that I'm in part of the Cabinet Office, I'm expecting them to take a fairly robust approach to the paperwork for their own contractors

                      Originally posted by Kate Cottrell View Post
                      All departments are due to report back in the next few weeks so we need to watch carefully the governments response (if any) to the statistics they have gathered.
                      Kate Cottrell
                      I've not heard this one, is this something they've published?

                      I've decided to go down the route of get the renewal paperwork through, get it reviewed and before renewing, seek confirmation from my department that they accept the contract review as evidence that the new rules do not apply to me. If they confirm, fine, if they don't or wont confirm, I'll look for other opportunities as I dont want a ticking time-bomb over me where they could request paperwork in 6 months, decide that I'm caught by the new requirements, pass my details to the nice people at HMRC and then me having to undergo some sort of HMRC investigation. TBH, I prefer an easier life...

                      B

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X