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A client is not permitted to pass on Employers NI costs on a negotiated rate if a Ltd role simply starts being paid on a PAYE basis - hence the mandatory cuts being applied to new 'assignment' rates on new contracts.
Therefore, on an existing contract where the rate was negotiated and agreed in the past as a Ltd rate, and then it is judged to have been disguised employment retrospectively. Surely the Employers NI liability would be with the ex-client/now-employer? just as paid holiday would be.
They can't say an individual is both a employee of the client in HMRCs eyes and an employees of the Ltd co in laws eyes. Well they can say this but this seems hugely unjust.
I know the process for testing for tax liability and employment are different, but the valid tests for both are closely aligned. There is interesting discussion on this here https://www.ifs.org.uk/comms/dp1.pdf
Nope - employed for tax purposes does not mean employed for employee benefit purposes (you can be the former and not the latter) so that back holiday may not be available.
It's also a timing thing - HMRC love to use the 4 year window they have to do such things and that 4 year window for cases has a while left to go.
If HMRC was following past behaviour I would expect letters to be sent at Easter for those caught by the public sector changes..
Is that 4 years AFTER your first SATR was submitted? i.e. if your first SATR was submitted for TY 2016/17 (submitted by Jan 31st 2017) - they still have a year to open a question / look into it?
Nice try, but that's only one fact, and NLUK dumped loads of them on us. His might not have been as important or relevant as the facts in my earlier comment, but we can't deny that he did bring the facts.
Nope - employed for tax purposes does not mean employed for employee benefit purposes (you can be the former and not the latter) so that back holiday may not be available.
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