The post from "dangerous" is pretty much correct.
There should be a recognition of the fact that from April next, many expenses currently tax free (i.e. they go from client to ltd co to you without a charge), mainly travel and subsistence, are likely to become taxable.
My own calculations indicate that (if certain assumptions are correct), the take home from an efficiently structured ltd co will fall by around 3% to 4% in 16/17.
I do have a calculator which is relatively detailed and pending some checks on my Excel skills (rusty) and some basics, I'm pondering the best route to release it.
There was also a mention above of tax motivated incorporation and dividends. I think the poster was suggesting that these were the same. Quite possibly. However the Red Book discusses changes to dividend tax (not an increase in income tax which ruled out in the Tory manifesto) and TMI as separate issues.
My fear is that either individuals will not be able to use a limited company to sell their services in certain situations (IR35?) or that it will not be possible to leave funds in a ltd company (where CT has been paid) and withdraw it later paying CGT perhaps (subject to ER) and no NIC.
i hope I'm wrong and poster above is correct.
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Reply to: Budget 2015 - get angry, get active
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Previously on "Budget 2015 - get angry, get active"
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Originally posted by MicrosoftBob View PostIf only there was some sort of contractors union to fight our cause
The problem (and the reason it all got that far) is the contractor mentality, which is largely an "all against all" one, and permeated with the constant insistence on "doing one's own thing" instead of unionizing (whatever the form). This will be the contractor's downfall IMO.
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Originally posted by cojak View PostLike this, you mean?
For example, total government tax take as a percentage of GDP has been between 34 and 36% for 40 years. Total personal taxes takes as a percentage of overall national income averages around 42% over the last 340 years. The current figures are 36% and 41.5% respectively. So there is no tax gap, there is only an overspend (and look no further than the ringfencing of pensions and health spend to see the real problem).
Also, and I'm sure this is familiar to every contractor, but compare a contractor on a £400pw rate, with a permie on a £55K pa salary (this is generally a like for like comparison). You find that the tax take is about £300-£400 difference. So, do HMRC really believe that every contractor moving from contract to permie will take the contractor rate with them? Because by making contracting financially untenable, that's the only way this will increase tax take.
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Originally posted by eek View PostIsn't that wrong.
You pocket 80% * 67.5% so 54% of the amount and pay 46% tax. Previously you pocketed 80%* .75% or 60% of the company's income. So it's worse but not horrendously so
Yes - I'd agree - worse, but not horrendously so.
There's a table showing the decrease in dividend income under the new proposals here:
How much will the April 2016 dividend tax changes cost you?
Here's my rough calculation:
Assume £400 per day for 230 (*) working days:
2015/16 2016/17
Gross Income = £92,000 £92,000
Salary (tax free) -£10,600 -£11,000
======= =======
Corp gross available: £81,400 £81,000
Corp tax @20 % -£16,280 -£16,200
======= =======
Net dividend: £65,120 £64,800
Personal tax on dividend -£ 9,128 -£11,435
======= =======
Dividend after all tax: £55,992 £53,365
Plus tax-free salary +£10,600 +£11,000
======= =======
Total income £66,592 £64,365
Total Income per month ~£ 5,550 ~£ 5,365
(365 days in year - 104 weekends - 8 bank holidays - 20 days vacation - 3 sickies = 230 working days)
Note: This is a "back-of-an-envelope" calculation - ignores company and personal NI contributions.
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Originally posted by MicrosoftBob View PostIf only there was some sort of contractors union to fight our cause
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Originally posted by chubacabra View PostI assume 20% corp tax and 32.5% tax on higher rate dividends
You pocket 80% * 67.5% so 54% of the amount and pay 46% tax. Previously you pocketed 80%* .75% or 60% of the company's income. So it's worse but not horrendously so
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Originally posted by DotasScandal View PostThe first (and possibly most difficult) thing is to get into contractors' brains that we must become a WE if we want to have any voice and control over our destiny as professionals... Feels like trying to empty the ocean with a teaspoon sometimes
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Originally posted by mulberryblue View PostCan you explain this statement please
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Originally posted by StrengthInNumbers View PostAfter first £43000 next year, every limited company will be giving away 52.5% in taxes. [emoji3]
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Realistically, protesting is a waste of time. Been there, done that, got the t-shirt.
If the Government has decided to do something, then 99.99% of the time it will get its way.
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Feel free to vent your spleen here Budget 2015 : AUCAE launch survey urging contractors and recruiters to have their voice heard. - All Umbrella Companies Are Equal All responses will be anonymised (f that's a word) and then sent to HMRC and no 11
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Originally posted by cojak View PostIt might work if you look to the future rather than the past.
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The first (and possibly most difficult) thing is to get into contractors' brains that we must become a WE if we want to have any voice and control over our destiny as professionals... Feels like trying to empty the ocean with a teaspoon sometimes
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Like this, you mean?
Originally posted by WordIsBond View PostI read the document again this weekend, taking a little more time on it. And the thing that struck me about it all is that we've already lost the argument, as far as the government is concerned, and if we want to have any hope to win it then the argument has to be re-framed.
Right now, the government clearly sees this in HMRC's terms. Those terms say that incorporation of freelancers is a negative for the government, because it means loss of revenue. It is bad for us to be independent, it is bad for us to be employees of our own companies rather than employees of our clients, because that model means less tax revenue. So there will always be this tug of war where they are trying to drag more of us back into the clutches of the tax model that maximises tax revenue.
That's a losing argument for us, because money talks. So they will constantly be doing things to drag us back into that model.
It seems to me that we need to make the case for why it is beneficial to the economy for us to have our own business, and to be incorporated, and to be accepted as businesses in our own right. This consultation document reads as if that isn't accepted as beneficial by government at all.
The document says IR35 must be failing because there is a whole industry that has grown up around beating IR35, and as contractor numbers increase, contractors operating under IR35 haven't increased. Maybe that means people are using that anti-IR35 industry to cheat. But maybe it means people are using it to structure their businesses to stay outside IR35. And maybe it means industry is choosing to work with contractors because they find it useful to have skilled and flexible workers available on a temporary basis, and so are willing to structure contracts and working relationships to accommodate contractors wishing to stay outside IR35. Maybe it isn't cheating. Maybe IR35 has changed behaviour....
But even if they accept that, it won't change anything, because they aren't getting the revenue they want. So they will just go after us in another way (like travel expenses?).
We need to not only make the case for flexibility, we also need to make the case for being limited companies, for being separate businesses. We need to make the case that the flexible workforce can't exist if we aren't protected from liability, so we have to form limited companies. We need to make the case that the flexible workforce has variable income, so having a limited company allows us to smooth out personal compensation between good years and bad years, and if we can't do that we'll have to push up costs to industry. We need to make the case to our client industries, to big business, that if we're the target of government, it is going to cost them, in increased fees but even more in the loss of parts of their available pool of skilled workers, and get them on board with arguing our case to government.
Right now, we're just a cash cow that isn't being milked, as far as government is concerned. The dividend tax, the expenses, the whole tone of this document, makes that clear. We need to make the case that our current model is needed, or they'll keep hitting it until it dies. We may fight off one thing, or another, but they'll just keep coming at us. We have to find a way to change the discussion.
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