Originally posted by zeitghost
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Previously on "Sunday Times seeks case-study: why are you self-employed?"
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Originally posted by Batcher View PostIt's always been my view that I'm generating VAT for collection. As an unpaid tax collector I don't benefit but HMG would be worse off without it if I was a permie.
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Originally posted by malvolio View PostOh FFS... Someone at the bottom of the food chain pays the VAT.
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Originally posted by MarillionFan View PostI paid more tax last year than most of you invoiced.
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Originally posted by malvolio View PostOh FFS... Someone at the bottom of the food chain pays the VAT.
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Originally posted by malvolio View PostThe whole tax avoidance thing is bollocks anyway. I did a blog a while back where I worked out how much tax I generated for HMRC compared to a permie on a comparable salary. With VAT, CT, PAYE and NICs on an average year, I paid a lot more a year than he did...
Edit: Found it...Assume an individual with a not unreasonable potential income of £75k, either as salary or as net profits from their business. And, for the sake of argument, we’ll assume that none of that money is going to be ploughed back into the business for growth or protection against future gaps in earnings.
An employee would pay roughly 39% in tax and a company owner using the minimum salary and dividends option would pay a mere 26%. Clearly unfair chaps, come on, play the game.
But – and I think it’s quite a big but – look at the actual numbers. Against that income, the employee would pay £29,250 in tax. The company owner, however, would pay £32,625. That’s £33,75 more than the employee does.
Using current (i.e. end of 2014) figures:
Income of 75K as permanent staff:
Income tax: £19627
National Insurance: £4731
Total taxes paid by employee: 24,358
Optionally you could include Employers NIC: £9252 (2015)
Based on a 235 working day year, a contractor on a day rate of £320 would take £75,000 a year not including VAT
Corporation tax: £11,765
Dividend tax: £4,595
Total tax paid by sole director: £16,360
And that's without lessening this figure via any expenses...
And as the above said, cost of VAT is reclaimed...Last edited by PerfectStorm; 8 January 2015, 21:43.
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Originally posted by mudskipper View PostHow's the vat thing count as paying more tax? You collect, they reclaim.
I pay more (real) tax in £ than I did as a permie, and take home more too. Sounds like a win/win.
HMRC is like Ched Evans. They know they've raped you but they're not going to admit to it.
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Originally posted by mudskipper View PostHow's the vat thing count as paying more tax? You collect, they reclaim.
I pay more (real) tax in £ than I did as a permie, and take home more too. Sounds like a win/win.
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Originally posted by malvolio View PostThe whole tax avoidance thing is bollocks anyway. I did a blog a while back where I worked out how much tax I generated for HMRC compared to a permie on a comparable salary. With VAT, CT, PAYE and NICs on an average year, I paid a lot more a year than he did...
Edit: Found it...
I pay more (real) tax in £ : p than I did as a permie, and take home more too. Sounds like a win/win.Last edited by mudskipper; 8 January 2015, 21:16.
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Originally posted by vetran View Postyes I think if they added the granting of employment rights to those IR35 caught the whole situation might be different as currently the employers / agencies lose nothing if you are IR35 caught so tend to supply contracts and conditions that are a long way from reality.
If you wanted to build SME ltds chopping one man bands off at the knees by arbitarily taxing them based on opinion hardly seems sensible.
80% of my immediate family had a business so I started one too, I made good money and had freedom to work more or less how I wanted. I was very happy. I'm not so happy or paying as much tax now I'm a permie.
Alternatively, they could move away from archaic, anachronistic definitions of the employee/employer relationship, of which the sole purpose these days is to try and justify taxing some individuals more than others... in turn, to cover the profligacy of politicians who can't control their spending, in order to buy the next election, and who themselves engage in, shall we call it, "tax planning". Besides, even regarding the mythical £2bn they supposedly "protect", doesn't the government waste far in excess of this each year?
And the other thing is, the people who the trash papers like the Daily Mail are aiming to incense could likely just become contractors themselves, except I guess some of them are too thick to put two and two together. If it's so great, go ahead, leverage your skills (or acquire them), and join in! (or at least stop pretending an ISA or pension is not the exact same type of action)
Luckily, it is so costly to enforce relative to any prospective yields, and the evidentiary bar HMRC has to jump over is so high, that at present there are ways to shield against it. But not if the FLC becomes a reality in tandem with the agency reporting requirements.
If they really are that yield hungry, they could go after MNCs. Not saying that they should, and it would probably cause far more damage in the long term than any good it did in the short term (much like their crusade against contractors), but it'd strain credulity a little less.Last edited by Zero Liability; 8 January 2015, 21:00.
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Originally posted by malvolio View PostThe whole tax avoidance thing is bollocks anyway. I did a blog a while back where I worked out how much tax I generated for HMRC compared to a permie on a comparable salary. With VAT, CT, PAYE and NICs on an average year, I paid a lot more a year than he did...
Edit: Found it...
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The whole tax avoidance thing is bollocks anyway. I did a blog a while back where I worked out how much tax I generated for HMRC compared to a permie on a comparable salary. With VAT, CT, PAYE and NICs on an average year, I paid a lot more a year than he did...
Edit: Found it...Last edited by malvolio; 8 January 2015, 20:27.
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