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Previously on "What to say to get out of invites to IR35 unfriendly activities"
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Only one answer is necessary
"Sorry, I'm washing my hair."
Works every time.
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Just for the record, the response from the client was:
I leave it up to contractors to decide for themselves on that one. You provide services as part of a team and I see it as important to work to ensure that team has a sense of cohesion so will always send the invite but leave it up to your personal preference.
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Originally posted by Taita View PostExactly. Are you sympathetic to anyone else's tax avoidance issues (if you do not share those issues)? All you do is drive a little wedge, bone of contention, irritating itch into your supplier/client relationship when you drag up matters that detract from the work in hand. What possibly could be wrong with sitting on a forum as an external consultant on the project?
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Originally posted by Contreras View PostTry to resist the temptation to involve IR35 in discussions with the client, whatever. You may think you have found a sympathetic ear but their only concern is to keep you happy for that moment. Once you are gone (and when you most need it) they will no longer care.
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Originally posted by MattZani View PostAccept the invitation and then just don't show up.
Eventually they'll get tired of inviting you
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Accept the invitation and then just don't show up.
Eventually they'll get tired of inviting you
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Personally my first reaction to such invites is to ask if it is relevant to my work there, not my IR35 status.
Don't get me wrong, ultimately we all need to mindful of IR35 but some are too quick to jump on it whenever the client requests something above and beyond the call of duty.
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Rather then do IR35 properly, rigourously, which would have reamed out the genuine disguised employees (and I would be happy with that), the govt settled for a FUD solution, which vaguely frightens people and puts them off, while not actually changing the status quo for the powerful vested interests involved. It's a fairly common government wheeze (FUD/muddy water management).
Using the FUD approach, the govt. gets to appear as if it is doing something, but working practices carry on much as before. Large public bodies get to continue their "off payoll", shenanigans, the friday-monday revolving door continues to revolve, and everybody is happy.
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Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostSpeak for yourself. The real value from contractors (in a proper supplier relationship) is their expertise and ability to deliver a distinct set of tasks. One indication might be that the client doesn't have equivalently skilled permies onsite. This is what saves the client real money. Tax is a rounding error. Now, if you're talking about the people that the government is really trying to target, those incorporating largely for tax purposes and typically doing low paid work for which equivalent permies are already onsite, we clearly agree, but many of us would be happy for the government to target those people without collateral damage.
Had IR35 been better at what it was ostensibly supposed to do, none of this would be a concern to a real business and arguably, the Dividend tax would not have been considered.
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Originally posted by unixman View PostThere's a reason you are there, and the client is not stupid.
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Sorry I cannot attend your meeting as I have to steralize my golf clubs.
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Originally posted by jamesbrown View PostThere are too many contractors that cannot see the wood for the trees w/r to IR35 and, as a result, massively over complicate things.
It's naive to think your status and tax position (they are one) are of no interest to the client. There's a reason you are there, and the client is not stupid.
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Originally posted by unixman View PostWhat I am saying is if you say you are concerned that activity x is the sort of thing that could lead to you being deemed an employee, they will know exactly what you mean (not Fred) and they will care. That is the whole reason you are there. Anyone who does not understand it (like Fred) will likely keep quiet so as not to appear foolish.
The reason that some clients fail to treat contractors as suppliers is that they don't act like suppliers, they act like disguised employees. There are too many contractors that cannot see the wood for the trees w/r to IR35 and, as a result, massively over complicate things. You're not there to deliver "not" the tasks. Be polite.
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