Originally posted by WordIsBond
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Low-paid wouldn't HAVE to be inside IR35, but the client would be liable for the full hit if they operate outside it and are later ruled to be inside it.
Clients would never want that open-ended liability. So they would either A: put the worker on payroll or B: insist on an umbrella they trust to operate PAYE (which pushes up the cost, since the worker still has to get Living Wage) or C: increase the rate above the low-pay threshold.
In the real world, it will kill over 90% of low-paid Ltd Co contracting, because engagers won't have much benefit in pushing the low-paid off of payroll anymore. But the legislation would allow it in the cases where it does make sense, and wouldn't hinder real businesses who are struggling / just starting up / going through a non-revenue product development stage.Comment
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Originally posted by WordIsBond View PostThe scope is limited to the low-paid. Allegedly, what they are trying to accomplish is to get the low paid back on payroll. This would do that and not impact anyone else, because of the scope limitations. The client liability under IR35 would only apply to the low-paid.Comment
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Originally posted by eek View Post
Oh and its not just the low paid that is in focus here. Yes they are at the core of the T&S discussion but the very first example in the IR35v discussion document is a £70k lawyer doing the exact same job as another £70k lawyer being paid via PAYE.... Any set of rules has to have him explicitly caught while keeping the £100k a year trouble shooter pm on a 3 month fix this project contract excluded...
In neither of cases given is the real cost to the engager being shown (PAYE includes sundry non-taxed benefits, plus the less quantifiable overhead of fixed workforce) thus when comparing the workers they are not comparing apples with apples; instead it's comparing one person that costs 70k "plus" with one that costs 70k flat. Naturally there's a difference in tax take from the two because one is effectively earning less than the other.
I also seriously call into question the likelihood of a contractor accepting the same "income" as PAYE at the lawyer end of the skills scale (not that I particularly want to draw any distinctions but evidently there is abuse by some employers at the other end). To enable a "levelling of the playing field" to offset lack of employee benefits (and coincidentally take the burden off the engager) I would anticipate a much higher rate than the PAYE employee, which would result in higher tax being paid.
Hang on....that looks suspiciously like the flipside of the same issue mentioned above...
The two objectives of the discussion are intertwined in a way that the example cases wholly misrepresent, nevermind the "difficult to price" but evident advantage that engagers see in having the ability to hire/fire/plan with ease.
What the discussion document thinks it's fixing is not real, or at best is not real to the degree it thinks it is though sadly I realise it's futile to try to change the focus of the discussion to something that resembles actualityComment
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Originally posted by LisaContractorUmbrella View PostI can see that it would take the low paid workers out of the loop but we'd still be left with the employment status based test of IR35 wouldn't we? If so, that still leaves legislation which is hard to police and even harder to produce a definitive test which historically has been the pain in the backside for HMRC and HMG
But if the problem is they want more revenue from us, that's a separate issue which is at least half solved with the dividend tax. At which point they need to ask the question of how big of a problem they really have any longer, and how much damage do they want to do to the flexible workforce (and the economy) to try to solve it.
So we come to the question -- are you trying to protect the low-paid, or are you trying to nail well-paid contractors?
If the former, they should do something like what I suggested.
If the latter, they need to come up with a solution that doesn't completely destroy the flexible workforce market or skew it heavily in favour of large consultancies vs the little guy. And they really should stop and consider that they've already done much of it with the dividend tax.Comment
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Originally posted by Guesstimator View PostThat example is the one that makes little sense and IMO should be countered robustly, indeed they both should actually. The focus needs to be moved from "income to Government coffers" to "cost to engager" to fully appreciate the two stated objectives of the discussion (protect the coffers/level the playing field) and to understand why contractors are used.
In neither of cases given is the real cost to the engager being shown (PAYE includes sundry non-taxed benefits, plus the less quantifiable overhead of fixed workforce) thus when comparing the workers they are not comparing apples with apples; instead it's comparing one person that costs 70k "plus" with one that costs 70k flat. Naturally there's a difference in tax take from the two because one is effectively earning less than the other.
I also seriously call into question the likelihood of a contractor accepting the same "income" as PAYE at the lawyer end of the skills scale (not that I particularly want to draw any distinctions but evidently there is abuse by some employers at the other end). To enable a "levelling of the playing field" to offset lack of employee benefits (and coincidentally take the burden off the engager) I would anticipate a much higher rate than the PAYE employee, which would result in higher tax being paid.
Hang on....that looks suspiciously like the flipside of the same issue mentioned above...
The two objectives of the discussion are intertwined in a way that the example cases wholly misrepresent, nevermind the "difficult to price" but evident advantage that engagers see in having the ability to hire/fire/plan with ease.
What the discussion document thinks it's fixing is not real, or at best is not real to the degree it thinks it is though sadly I realise it's futile to try to change the focus of the discussion to something that resembles actualityComment
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Originally posted by WordIsBond View PostSure. But if we're being told that all they want to do is solve the problem of low-paid workers being pushed off of payroll by unscrupulous employers, then this solves it. I thought you were telling us that it isn't about raising revenue, that it really is primarily about the low-paid. You don't really have to have IR35 working well if the engager is liable, all you need is the threat of it in most cases.
But if the problem is they want more revenue from us, that's a separate issue which is at least half solved with the dividend tax. At which point they need to ask the question of how big of a problem they really have any longer, and how much damage do they want to do to the flexible workforce (and the economy) to try to solve it.
So we come to the question -- are you trying to protect the low-paid, or are you trying to nail well-paid contractors?
If the former, they should do something like what I suggested.
If the latter, they need to come up with a solution that doesn't completely destroy the flexible workforce market or skew it heavily in favour of large consultancies vs the little guy. And they really should stop and consider that they've already done much of it with the dividend tax.
This is just my opinion and it could well be wrong but what is fantastic is that people on here are actually putting together viable proposals to give to HMRC as alternatives to what they've come up with - I don't think we've really done this before and with this and the surveys that are running, I think we have a real chance to get through some sensible changesComment
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Originally posted by LisaContractorUmbrella View PostI do believe it's about the numbers working off payroll but we need to consider how business would react to the change that you're suggesting - again are they going to run the risk of debt transfer? While IR35 still exists, if it's up to the client to decide whether people are in or out and they'd face penalties for getting it wrong, the less people are likely to fall outside - whether they are genuinely in business on their own account or not.
This is just my opinion and it could well be wrong but what is fantastic is that people on here are actually putting together viable proposals to give to HMRC as alternatives to what they've come up with - I don't think we've really done this before and with this and the surveys that are running, I think we have a real chance to get through some sensible changes
But business won't be deciding "in or out" if HMG does something like I suggested on the low-paid. They'll be deciding to make sure it never comes to an "in or out" decision.
As to your second paragraph, I doubt the proposals we make on the Internet will go too far, but who knows? But the surveys you and others are running, and the level of responses, has to be sending a message that there are some people who are really unhappy with where they are going. And those people and their friends and families are voters, AND they are from the segment that they would normally expect to be Tory voters.
And it is also providing cold, hard facts (though I think the political calculations are more likely to have an impact than actual facts).
So what you are doing may have a huge impact, and we all should be very grateful.Comment
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Originally posted by Dylan View PostThey will just do what they want.
Remember we are not writing a responses that just says this is tulip its going to destroy our business.
We are producing
1) surveys that will show the size of the problem,
2) clear cut explanations of what is likely to happen if things are implemented in the suggested manner and
3) solutions that have been thought through from multiple different angles.
Yes we are trying to exclude ourselves from the pain but we are also trying to provide HMRC with solutions that solve most of the problems they have been told to fix in ways that are easy to implement and follow...Last edited by eek; 20 August 2015, 09:47.merely at clientco for the entertainmentComment
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