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Increase the 5% allowance for being inside IR35?

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    #11
    Originally posted by MicrosoftBob View Post
    With IR35 you're deemed to be an employee

    How many employees pay employers NI ?

    Surely the whole point of IR35 is to make you pay more taxes than everybody else

    HTH
    All employees pay employers' NI.

    The alternatives are:

    1. Client pays employers' NI for you. Reduces your rate by 13% and costs them more in admin.
    2. Contractor Ltd. co. pays employers' NI.
    3. Neither pay employers' NI and Ltd. company contractors get to pay less tax than a similar employee.
    Will work inside IR35. Or for food.

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      #12
      Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
      All employees pay employers' NI.

      The alternatives are:

      1. Client pays employers' NI for you. Reduces your rate by 13% and costs them more in admin.
      2. Contractor Ltd. co. pays employers' NI.
      3. Neither pay employers' NI and Ltd. company contractors get to pay less tax than a similar employee.
      When I was an employee I didn't pay employers NI, neither does my GF, my ex wife or anyone I know

      No employee in the UK pays employers' NI, that would be illegal
      Socialism is inseparably interwoven with totalitarianism and the abject worship of the state.

      No Socialist Government conducting the entire life and industry of the country could afford to allow free, sharp, or violently-worded expressions of public discontent.

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        #13
        Originally posted by MicrosoftBob View Post
        When I was an employee I didn't pay employers NI, neither does my GF, my ex wife or anyone I know

        No employee in the UK pays employers' NI, that would be illegal
        Now you're just being deliberately obtuse. What you know as your salary is after employers' NI is paid, but that's still a tax on your employment. You can put your head in the sand and say it isn't paid by you, but you cost your employer more and/or earn less because of it so the end result is the same - you've paid the tax. And to be literal, you don't pay any tax. Your employer deducts it all.

        There's no justification for saying contractors shouldn't pay employers' NI, unless you're saying the clients should pay it instead. Otherwise it's just a tax break for contractors, which is what IR35 is meant to stop, rightly or wrongly.
        Will work inside IR35. Or for food.

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          #14
          Originally posted by MicrosoftBob View Post
          Surely the whole point of IR35 is to make you pay more taxes than everybody else
          That is certainly the net effect and the idiots who came up with it should have realised that compliance would be a massive problem. They took it too far and then seemed surprised that people went to great lengths to circumvent it one way or another.

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            #15
            Originally posted by MicrosoftBob View Post
            When I was an employee I didn't pay employers NI, neither does my GF, my ex wife or anyone I know

            No employee in the UK pays employers' NI, that would be illegal
            When I was a permie line manager, I didn't even know the gross salary of staff as written on their payslip - only how much it was charged to my cost centre, which included employers pension contributions and employers NI.

            As far as bean counters are concerned, an employee gets "paid" 100 beans, of which 80 beans appear on their payslip - and 50 beans they are actually paid in net salary.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Payroll_tax

            The economic burden of the payroll tax falls almost entirely on the worker, regardless of whether the tax is remitted by the employer or the employee, as the employers’ share of payroll taxes is passed on to employees in the form of lower wages than would otherwise be paid.

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              #16
              Saying you can have 10% 'expenses' instead of 5% sounds like a typical politician's con trick.

              If you're in business, whether its selling artefacts, your intellect or your skills, you should be able to claim legitimate expenses full stop. No half measures as some sort of sop or because you are 'only' selling your it skills.

              I take no business risk as an IT contractor? I have a risk I wont find another contract every time I end one. Even if I 'work' for some of the biggest companies in the UK if they engage some no mark agency, there's a risk my co ends up being in a line of creditors waiting to get paid. And that's before some of these big companies decide to renege on contract terms and unilaterally cut the agreed fees to be paid.

              Settle for 10% instead of 5% that's a mug's and loser's game.
              I couldn't give two fornicators! Yes, really!

              Comment


                #17
                Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
                If you're an employee you have to pay employee taxes. You have to pay employer taxes because you're an employer (of yourself). Are you suggesting the client should have to pay the employer's NI and give you employment rights? Then you really are an employee of the client and that changes the whole model.

                The whole point of IR35 is to make you pay the same taxes as everybody else. They're hardly likely to let you off 13% of it.
                The point of IR35 is to say you should pay the same taxes as everybody else BECAUSE YOU ARE AN EMPLOYEE. Hidden employment / false self-employment, that's the rhetoric always used.

                IR35 says you get none of the protections of employment, but all the taxes, PLUS all of the employer's taxes. But it is even worse than that. It's the employer's gross taxes. If they were paying the 13.8%, they'd be deducting it from their corporation tax, so their net tax would be just over 11%. That doesn't matter for you, because you won't have any profit -- IR35 makes you pay it all out in salary.

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                  #18
                  Originally posted by NotAllThere View Post
                  Even if you convince yourself that everyone else pay ernic, under IR35, legitimate non-T&S expenses are not claimable. You also cannot deduct business expenses that other non-IR35 affected businesses can. There's just the 5% allowance.

                  A non-IR35 affected business can deduct accountancy and other advisor costs.
                  A non-IR35 affected business can deduct training costs
                  A non-IR35 affected business provides hardware (laptops) for employees that are deductable.

                  Therefore if you're affect by IR35, unless all your expenses are within the 5%, you pay more tax than "everyone else".
                  To be fair, for most that will be within the 5%, won't it? It's not likely to be 10% as a general rule.

                  Comment


                    #19
                    Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
                    Of course by "everyone else" I meant the working public at large, as I'm sure you realise, and not other businesses...
                    What I wrote covers that definition:

                    A non-IR35 affected business can deduct training costs
                    Everyone else can claim the cost of training from their employers or has the training paid for directly.

                    A non-IR35 affected business provides hardware (laptops) for employees that are deductable.
                    Everyone else can claim the cost of hardware (laptops) from their employers or has the hardware paid for directly.

                    Therefore IR35 affected persons pay more tax than the equivalent permie on the same income.

                    However... contractors get paid more than permies, which ameliorates the extra cost. Many expenses, are covered in the 5%, especially as T&S expenses are on top of that. Which is why, back in 2000 when there was a chance that most people would be inside IR35, I still maintained it wouldn't be the end of contracting.

                    The biggest hit really is the inability (within IR35) to retain income in the company for later disbursement in hard times. Abolition of the dividend route of removing income from the company would have been a reasonable solution - however, it would have been extremely difficult to implement without knocking other "genuine" (in the eyes of HMRC) businesses.
                    Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!

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