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Interim managers set to be collateral damage
by Susie Hughes at 10:53 21/06/12 (News on IR35)
Interim managers will be collateral damage in the Government's 'ill thought-out' proposals to prevent senior people within organisations obtaining a tax advantage by operating through their own companies.
The Government’s latest proposals that ‘controlling persons’ have income tax and national insurance deducted at source follows adverse publicity at a number of senior Government workers, including Ed Lester, head of the Students Loans Company, avoiding tax by operating through their own companies.

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However, trade groups,the Association of Professional Staffing Companies (APSCo) and the Institute of Interim Management (IIM) said that it will have 'a hugely detrimental effect on the professional flexible staffing sector'

Ann Swain, Chief Executive of APSCo said: “Yet again, the professional staffing sector is in danger of suffering collateral damage in the Government’s broad brush approach to employment legislation. We are writing to Danny Alexander, Chief Secretary to the Treasury to vociferously oppose these proposals and working to build a coalition of opposition with other interested stakeholders. These proposals will affect company turnarounds, change management programmes and other business critical issues often undertaken by skilled professionals on a short term basis.”

The agency body says that one difficulty stems around the Government’s definition of a controlling person as someone who has managerial control over a significant proportion of employees and/or control over a significant proportion of the company’s budget. Additionally, it says, the Government believes that there is an established and growing problem of individuals working through personal services companies to disguise employment, basing this supposition on the misguided belief that when IR35 was introduced 12 years ago, it was unusual for a senior/controlling person to be engaged through their own limited company.

Flawed
Ann Swain said: “Assuming that all controlling persons are in fact employees is a fundamentally flawed argument as it takes no account of the professional interim market.


“Additionally, the frankly bizarre conclusion that the increase in individuals using personal services companies is related to a deliberate attempt at disguising employment status is also flawed. There has indeed been an increase in the use of personal services companies by professional contractors operating at a senior level - but this is directly related to the growth of the interim market. According to a recent IPsos MORI Survey the amount of business generated by the interim management sector has jumped 93 per cent in the past five years which, given the Government’s agenda for growth, should be applauded rather than penalised.”

Ad van der Rest, co Chairman of the IIM supported the agency group, he said: “These proposals are ill considered, they attempt to address the wrong problem and they threaten to damage the UK economy by freezing out a vital community of interim executives who are just the sort of flexible leaders that are needed in the current climate. Senior interim executives undertake engagements, often in turnaround and crisis situations on finite contracts and carry out assignments as independent businesses moving from engagement to engagement.

"The implication that all senior interims are in some way trying to evade their legal obligations by hiding behind personal service companies is perverse and the notion that an independent professional providing business services should be debarred from their professional trade on the basis of their seniority is illogical and anti-business.”

IR35
Some have felt that the Government's proposals are something of a knee-jerk reaction against the adverse publicity and have queried why they didn't just enforce IR35.

Ann Swain continued: “The Government also says that it wishes to achieve transparency around workers’ taxation issues, but treating all senior workers as employees is nothing more than a blunt instrument with which to hit the professional interim market.

"APSCo has been in full discussions about the issue of employment status as part of the IR35 Forum for the past 12 months – a sure sign that the issue is not as black and white as the Government would like to think.

"We believe there is an alternative way to achieve transparency which includes applying the current IR35 legislation correctly and consistently. The right to seek appropriate assurances about the tax arrangements of long term specialist contractors is already available in the private sector and is a course of action that has always been open to the Government in relation to the public sector. Consequently APSCo believes that there is no requirement for a change in the law.”

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Susie Hughes © Shout99 2012

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Interim managers set to be col... Susie Hughes - 21/06
    Re: Interim managers set to be... brianc - 21/06
       Re: Interim managers set to be... Wilberforce - 21/06
          Re: Interim managers set to be... brianc - 21/06
    The reason they don't apply IR... TaxedToDeath - 21/06
       So isn't IR35 dead? brianc - 22/06
          Go away TaxedToDeath - 22/06
             Re: Go away Plodge - 22/06
          If RTI fails .... brianc - 25/06
             Re: If RTI fails .... Plodge - 25/06
    Re: Interim managers set to be... den-ny - 22/06
       Re: Interim managers set to be... TaxedToDeath - 23/06
          Re: Interim managers set to be... den-ny - 23/06
             Re: Interim managers set to be... TaxedToDeath - 24/06

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