Originally posted by bobspud
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Public sector IR35 consultation launched
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Blog? What blog...? -
Originally posted by bobspud View Postand how often do they get what they want once it gets to a court?Comment
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Originally posted by malvolio View PostIn court, quite a lot. At the FTTs not quite as much. Snag is this may not be a subject for the FTT
UK law already states that supplying goods and services to the UK Government must be performed on a level playing field. If HMRC make it impossible for an SME to supply work at a cost effective price due to punitive tax treatment compared to the larger players then there is a case to answer.
They might wish it was a tribunal if that happens...
Especially given the laws on paying compensation to the market for wrongly awarded government contracts.Comment
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Originally posted by bobspud View PostIn which case it becomes a humongous case of restrictive trade practices...
UK law already states that supplying goods and services to the UK Government must be performed on a level playing field. If HMRC make it impossible for an SME to supply work at a cost effective price due to punitive tax treatment compared to the larger players then there is a case to answer.
They might wish it was a tribunal if that happens...
Especially given the laws on paying compensation to the market for wrongly awarded government contracts.
The "wrongly awarded" bit doesn't fly either: that's an EU limitation and we don't' really care about them any more.Blog? What blog...?Comment
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No the law is still a statute on the books and contracts will be awarded based on it. The law may well be withdrawn at some point but that is a long way off. Every piece of work that is awarded between the insertion of the HMRC crap and the repeal of EU law will be subject to it.
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/public-s...urement-policy
This governs the award of every contract the UK government signs. If they fail to follow it you as a supplier can challenge them and they will probably have to pay you. I have heard of serious money changing hands thanks to a cowboy stunts trying to subvert contracts to the "right" party...Comment
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Originally posted by missinggreenfields View PostAlternatively...
DWP will need to confirm that they are using PSCs (to use their term). DWP will ask the consultancy. The consultancy will ask the two initial questions that are asked to the contractors. The contractors "fail" those two questions. .
Putting a PSC through the DoS framework doesn't change the fact they are a PSC and therefore the closest engaging 'agent' has to collect the tax . .....or have I missed something?Comment
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Originally posted by youngguy View PostThat's my understanding looking at the doc.
Putting a PSC through the DoS framework doesn't change the fact they are a PSC and therefore the closest engaging 'agent' has to collect the tax . .....or have I missed something?merely at clientco for the entertainmentComment
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By the way there are some more documents that are worth looking at...
Contingent Labour ONE | Crown Commercial Service
ConsultancyONE | Crown Commercial Service
This one is quite useful...
http://ccs-agreements.cabinetoffice....%20%281%29.pdfComment
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Originally posted by eek View PostYep, you are missing the CLOne guidance document with flowchart...
I thought it outlined the different framework options and implied that cl one would almost certainly be caught by the new rules ....but that doesn't mean a PSC via DoS (or G cloud) is not caught by defacto? I haven't seen anything that shoes a direct relationship between the procurement framework and the new rules.Comment
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Originally posted by youngguy View PostThat doesn't talk about PSCs though does it?
I thought it outlined the different framework options and implied that cl one would almost certainly be caught by the new rules ....but that doesn't mean a PSC via DoS (or G cloud) is not caught by defacto? I haven't seen anything that shoes a direct relationship between the procurement framework and the new rules.'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!Comment
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