The HMRC Consultation on IR35 includes another example of HMRC's one-sided "analysis." On page nine, Charlie and Thomas are compared. I'll assume you all can read it, I won't give the details.
After the infamous Ben/Jo case study of 2015, I don't trust them anymore, so I decided to run some numbers myself. The mistakes here aren't quite as egregious as that one. There's really only one substantive error, and that is that they forgot the pension contributions which ABC Ltd is mandated to make on behalf of Thomas. So I've assumed that the £50K cost of employing Thomas includes not only salary and NI but pension contributions as well. I've used the 3% that they will be required to pay by 2019, and assumed Thomas makes the 4% Pension AE mandated contribution.
I won't bore you with every number, but I end up with Thomas having a gross salary of £44168.82, Employer's NI of 4506.11, and employer pension contribution of 1325.07, total cost £50K. Thomas will be making his own pension contribution under AE of £1766.75 (total combined pension contribution £3091.82). The final net result is that HMRC takes £14693.87, and Thomas has a pension contribution of £3091.82 and take home pay of £32,214.31.
In Charlie's case, outside of IR35, he has expenses of £2500, the same pension contribution as Thomas (£3091.82), and ends up paying £8616.09 (Corporation tax and dividend tax). As with HMRC's calc, it's about £6K less than ABC/Thomas. Charlie's take-home pay is £35792.10 -- about £3500 more than Thomas, right? But £3500 isn't a particularly high premium when you aren't receiving any employment rights. From HMRC's perspective, it isn't fair that Charlie pays THEM less. But from Charlie's perspective, he's not getting very much compensation for the loss of employment rights, is he?
But HMRC's solution to the unfairness is to force Charlie inside IR35, with the result that he will pay an extra £5K, approximately. Now, that's nice and fair for THEM because they get close to the same amount of money. But it is hardly fair for Charlie. Now, he has LESS take-home pay than Thomas, no guarantee of work after this contract, in fact no guarantee he won't be dumped without notice, no holiday pay, no employment rights at all, and HMRC in their wisdom have decided his take-home pay should be less than the employee's.
Their very own example proves that what they want to do, force more people into IR35, will not be "more fair", it will drive people out of contracting and destroy the flexible work-force. From their perspective, they think that narrows the tax gap. But from Charlie's perspective, it means contracting is a loser. There's no reason to do it, to take the risks and forgo the employment rights, if he's going to be in a worse position financially for having done so.
Their own example proves that the reform that is needed is not to find a way to force more people into IR35, it is to reform IR35 itself so that it is less punitive. As long as IR35 is punitive, people are going to take chances with "creative" ways to avoid it. If your goal is increased compliance, you have to A) make it more reasonable from the perspective of those who are supposed to be complying and B) actually make it clear enough that people aren't easily confused as to whether or not they should be inside or not. Since HMRC, in case after case that they've lost in the courts, has demonstrated that even they don't understand the legal position, B has a long way to go.
But even if you make it clear, if IR35 makes a contractor worse off than an employee doing the same job in the same way, and the employee also has employment rights, you will not get increased compliance. There will be schemes and plans and creative avoidance and just blatantly ignoring it. You have to stop making it punitive. It's simple human nature -- the more outrageous your treatment of someone, the less likely they are to continue to submit to that treatment. Charlie won't do it. No matter how much they want him to, he's not going to operate that contract within IR35. He'll either quit contracting, and you no longer have a flexible workforce, or he'll find a way to dodge IR35. You have to have a more substantive reform of IR35. You can talk about "fair" all you want and try to force Charlie inside IR35 but in the real world that simply isn't going to happen.
This consultation is useless because it is focused on how you can force more people into IR35 instead of how you can make IR35 more fair and less punitive. If you do that, you'll get better compliance. If you don't, you proliferate avoidance and evasion, and you have to hire hundreds or thousands more tax inspectors. If HMRC are right that 90% of those who should be inside aren't, they should be asking themselves why 90% are willing to take such a risk. That's the real question they haven't answered and don't have the integrity to ask.
After the infamous Ben/Jo case study of 2015, I don't trust them anymore, so I decided to run some numbers myself. The mistakes here aren't quite as egregious as that one. There's really only one substantive error, and that is that they forgot the pension contributions which ABC Ltd is mandated to make on behalf of Thomas. So I've assumed that the £50K cost of employing Thomas includes not only salary and NI but pension contributions as well. I've used the 3% that they will be required to pay by 2019, and assumed Thomas makes the 4% Pension AE mandated contribution.
I won't bore you with every number, but I end up with Thomas having a gross salary of £44168.82, Employer's NI of 4506.11, and employer pension contribution of 1325.07, total cost £50K. Thomas will be making his own pension contribution under AE of £1766.75 (total combined pension contribution £3091.82). The final net result is that HMRC takes £14693.87, and Thomas has a pension contribution of £3091.82 and take home pay of £32,214.31.
In Charlie's case, outside of IR35, he has expenses of £2500, the same pension contribution as Thomas (£3091.82), and ends up paying £8616.09 (Corporation tax and dividend tax). As with HMRC's calc, it's about £6K less than ABC/Thomas. Charlie's take-home pay is £35792.10 -- about £3500 more than Thomas, right? But £3500 isn't a particularly high premium when you aren't receiving any employment rights. From HMRC's perspective, it isn't fair that Charlie pays THEM less. But from Charlie's perspective, he's not getting very much compensation for the loss of employment rights, is he?
But HMRC's solution to the unfairness is to force Charlie inside IR35, with the result that he will pay an extra £5K, approximately. Now, that's nice and fair for THEM because they get close to the same amount of money. But it is hardly fair for Charlie. Now, he has LESS take-home pay than Thomas, no guarantee of work after this contract, in fact no guarantee he won't be dumped without notice, no holiday pay, no employment rights at all, and HMRC in their wisdom have decided his take-home pay should be less than the employee's.
Their very own example proves that what they want to do, force more people into IR35, will not be "more fair", it will drive people out of contracting and destroy the flexible work-force. From their perspective, they think that narrows the tax gap. But from Charlie's perspective, it means contracting is a loser. There's no reason to do it, to take the risks and forgo the employment rights, if he's going to be in a worse position financially for having done so.
Their own example proves that the reform that is needed is not to find a way to force more people into IR35, it is to reform IR35 itself so that it is less punitive. As long as IR35 is punitive, people are going to take chances with "creative" ways to avoid it. If your goal is increased compliance, you have to A) make it more reasonable from the perspective of those who are supposed to be complying and B) actually make it clear enough that people aren't easily confused as to whether or not they should be inside or not. Since HMRC, in case after case that they've lost in the courts, has demonstrated that even they don't understand the legal position, B has a long way to go.
But even if you make it clear, if IR35 makes a contractor worse off than an employee doing the same job in the same way, and the employee also has employment rights, you will not get increased compliance. There will be schemes and plans and creative avoidance and just blatantly ignoring it. You have to stop making it punitive. It's simple human nature -- the more outrageous your treatment of someone, the less likely they are to continue to submit to that treatment. Charlie won't do it. No matter how much they want him to, he's not going to operate that contract within IR35. He'll either quit contracting, and you no longer have a flexible workforce, or he'll find a way to dodge IR35. You have to have a more substantive reform of IR35. You can talk about "fair" all you want and try to force Charlie inside IR35 but in the real world that simply isn't going to happen.
This consultation is useless because it is focused on how you can force more people into IR35 instead of how you can make IR35 more fair and less punitive. If you do that, you'll get better compliance. If you don't, you proliferate avoidance and evasion, and you have to hire hundreds or thousands more tax inspectors. If HMRC are right that 90% of those who should be inside aren't, they should be asking themselves why 90% are willing to take such a risk. That's the real question they haven't answered and don't have the integrity to ask.
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