The guy in Brazil is a Swiss national who lives there permanently and works through a company he has set up there, but I suspect Brazil is not too onerous about such things. The person in Canada I have no idea about - she just moved home there from Colombia while still working for us, but her status I don't know, although I suspect she may just be winging it. We do however have two regular employees in Brussels, having registered an outpost office there last month to deal with the EU. So we don't have a consistent approach to offsite working.
I'm not much supervised or directed in my ongoing work - in fact I have to produce my own work planning, operating within the organisation's overall strategic guidelines - which we make suggestions about when they are being developed, but it's the Board which decides on them. There is no-one else engaged in documentation management: I'm the Head of Documentation and the only person able to fulfill this role in the NGO. I manage a few interns, often also remotely by online communication as we are spread across 3 buildings in Geneva, one quite a distance from the others. One of my specific roles is to find and implement a replacement documentation management system (we run a publicly accessible website and database of documents in a very niche field) and no-one else in the organisation can do that. OK, I don't have authority to buy the new system - the Director would need to do that - but my recommendation is going to be very influential. I do have direct budget responsibilities, albeit with a tiny budget, but payment requests all have to be signed by our Director. I would not, if in the UK (and don't now), represent our NGO (unless speaking at occasional conferences counts as such). Unlike in some of my previous roles elsewhere, I don't have decision-making autonomy except at the technical level of getting documents online.
Much of the work consists of analysing and adding metadata to a flow of incoming UN and related documents in our niche field and this is ongoing - a process rather than a project. I've done projects elsewhere with more finite outcomes, but here it's managing an ongoing and endless flow of incoming documentation, primarily online. The relatively few hard-copy items would be dealt with on visits to Geneva twice a month. I'd really have to think how to try to present this in a more 'project' light. The main problem is likely to be my employers taking fright at the idea of MAYBE getting caught under IR35 later if HMRC dispute the nature of the beast. Their idea of self-employment is to be able to wash their hands of liability for team members afar, but probably they could be less at risk if I was simply employed in the UK.
Employment status in the UK and its consequences for my current employers would hinge hugely on what exactly the phrase "where the employee is inside National Insurance" means in the HMRC guidance note for UK employees without a UK employer. National Insurance for people in the UK working where there is no employer in the UK I am beyond the age when I make primary (employee) NI contributions of any kind, and the guidance note states that secondary (employer) NI contributions arise if the employee is "in National Insurance", which I don't seem to be.
Deloitte seems to also take the line that it is employee liability for primary (employee) NI payments which triggers employer liability for secondary (employer) payments. https://www.taxpublications.deloitte...C?OpenDocument
The wording in the Guidance Note carries the logical meaning that if the employee is not subject to making NI contributions (what else could not being "inside National Insurance" logically mean?) then the employer also escapes, but it doesn't square with what currently happens for employers actually based in the UK, who do have to pay NI at 13.8% for over-65 employees. Maybe the wording is deliberate - these EU Regulations came into force after a long process of EU and EEA horse-trading and maybe some countries objected to the idea of employers having to pay the equivalent of NI for older workers (or have no concept of older workers at all). I should probably go through the EU Regulations in detail but they are literally hundreds of pages long and overwhelmingly deal with social security issues rather than employment so it's a bit like looking for a needle in a Brussels haystack.
My employer is likely to be risk averse if there is any prospect at all of them getting caught up by IR35, but equally wary of creating a formal employee situation in the UK with liability for employer NI payments. They would have been happiest if the UK was like Brazil, where the likes of IR35 don't seem to be much in evidence ... I think I am going to have to work the phones with HMRC if I can ever find the right number - my employers just couldn't do it: I had to explain Swiss tax law to them last year .......
I'm not much supervised or directed in my ongoing work - in fact I have to produce my own work planning, operating within the organisation's overall strategic guidelines - which we make suggestions about when they are being developed, but it's the Board which decides on them. There is no-one else engaged in documentation management: I'm the Head of Documentation and the only person able to fulfill this role in the NGO. I manage a few interns, often also remotely by online communication as we are spread across 3 buildings in Geneva, one quite a distance from the others. One of my specific roles is to find and implement a replacement documentation management system (we run a publicly accessible website and database of documents in a very niche field) and no-one else in the organisation can do that. OK, I don't have authority to buy the new system - the Director would need to do that - but my recommendation is going to be very influential. I do have direct budget responsibilities, albeit with a tiny budget, but payment requests all have to be signed by our Director. I would not, if in the UK (and don't now), represent our NGO (unless speaking at occasional conferences counts as such). Unlike in some of my previous roles elsewhere, I don't have decision-making autonomy except at the technical level of getting documents online.
Much of the work consists of analysing and adding metadata to a flow of incoming UN and related documents in our niche field and this is ongoing - a process rather than a project. I've done projects elsewhere with more finite outcomes, but here it's managing an ongoing and endless flow of incoming documentation, primarily online. The relatively few hard-copy items would be dealt with on visits to Geneva twice a month. I'd really have to think how to try to present this in a more 'project' light. The main problem is likely to be my employers taking fright at the idea of MAYBE getting caught under IR35 later if HMRC dispute the nature of the beast. Their idea of self-employment is to be able to wash their hands of liability for team members afar, but probably they could be less at risk if I was simply employed in the UK.
Employment status in the UK and its consequences for my current employers would hinge hugely on what exactly the phrase "where the employee is inside National Insurance" means in the HMRC guidance note for UK employees without a UK employer. National Insurance for people in the UK working where there is no employer in the UK I am beyond the age when I make primary (employee) NI contributions of any kind, and the guidance note states that secondary (employer) NI contributions arise if the employee is "in National Insurance", which I don't seem to be.
Deloitte seems to also take the line that it is employee liability for primary (employee) NI payments which triggers employer liability for secondary (employer) payments. https://www.taxpublications.deloitte...C?OpenDocument
The wording in the Guidance Note carries the logical meaning that if the employee is not subject to making NI contributions (what else could not being "inside National Insurance" logically mean?) then the employer also escapes, but it doesn't square with what currently happens for employers actually based in the UK, who do have to pay NI at 13.8% for over-65 employees. Maybe the wording is deliberate - these EU Regulations came into force after a long process of EU and EEA horse-trading and maybe some countries objected to the idea of employers having to pay the equivalent of NI for older workers (or have no concept of older workers at all). I should probably go through the EU Regulations in detail but they are literally hundreds of pages long and overwhelmingly deal with social security issues rather than employment so it's a bit like looking for a needle in a Brussels haystack.
My employer is likely to be risk averse if there is any prospect at all of them getting caught up by IR35, but equally wary of creating a formal employee situation in the UK with liability for employer NI payments. They would have been happiest if the UK was like Brazil, where the likes of IR35 don't seem to be much in evidence ... I think I am going to have to work the phones with HMRC if I can ever find the right number - my employers just couldn't do it: I had to explain Swiss tax law to them last year .......
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