No treasury decision yet on managed service companies; lawspeed seminar planned

IR35 Test

Officials at HM Revenue and Customs and at the Treasury are actively considering industry input over the intended crackdown on managed service and composite companies used by contractors.

Consultations with the industry are being given real attention.

No Decisions Yet

''No decisions have yet been made, but the consultation process is active,'' says Adrian Marlowe, a director at the Hove-based legal consultancy Lawspeed. Lawspeed plans a seminar, to be held on April 3, 2007, called: "AVOIDING LIABILITY FOR MSC CONTRACTOR TAX" at which representatives of the Treasury will be present to discuss the subject.

What is Managed Service

Two government consultations "Tackling Managed Service Companies", and "Managed Service Companies Transfer of Pay as You Earn and National Insurance Contributions Debts" introduce legislation that is due to become law with effect from 6th April 2007. The subject will be managed service companies and third party liability legislation, meaning and effect, what is or could be a Managed Service Company, impact, how to deal with the issues that arise, contract arrangements, and how to avoid exposure to contractor tax liability.

No decisions have yet been made and the consultation process is active

Adrian Marlowe-Lawspeed

The final form of this attack by the Treasury on managed service companies is not yet determined, but the Treasury is determined to achieve its objectives, industry sources say. It is most likely that composite companies will take the full heat, and probably disappear.

''There is a question mark over whether operating through a personal service company set up by a scheme provider will achieve avoidance of the new legislation,'' Marlowe says.

Attack Goes On

The plans, announced in the Chancellor’s Pre-budget speech, and detailed in a document released by the Treasury last December, would oblige the owner of a managed service company be treated like a salaried employee.

Where to Draw the Line

But in the course of the consultation currently underway, the Treasury is considering how managed service companies will be defined, and how those companies will be singled out for treatment. A managed service company does not differ in many respects from any small limited company. The issue is: how does the Treasury plan to draw the line?

Expect news at the seminar to be held on April 3 called AVOIDING LIABILITY FOR MSC CONTRACTOR TAX

Adrian Marlowe-Lawspeed

The Treasury does intend to succeed in its projected increased tax receipts of £1 billion through this new attack on managed service companies..

Operators of umbrella and composite companies are obviously in uproar over the move. They point to the amount of paperwork that the move will generate. Then they wonder how the Treasury intends to police the 240,000 contractors who currently work under schemes of one type or another in the UK.

One of the most controversial issues in the new legislation involves the creation of third-party liability for tax debts of managed service companies. According to the drafted legislation, agencies and recruiters who work with the company could be held liable for the company’s tax owings. On first review the rules provide liability in the following order. First for the MSC to be liable, then any scheme provider, and then any agency or end user, or any ''person who directly or indirectly has encouraged, facilitated or otherwise been involved in the provision by the MSC of the services of the individual.''

Many in the industry are vigorously protesting this measure, and it will be rediscussed at the Lawspeed seminar.

You can keep up to date with all the latest developments in our dedicated section: Managed Services Companies.

Published: Thursday, February 22, 2007

© 2012 All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. Please see our copyright notice. If you want to use any content you have seen on this site then please request our media pack and ask for details of our Content Licencing Service.


Readers Comments...


  
Bookmark and Share
  
     
  

Latest Site Updates

The tax avoidance arms race is MAD: mitigation, avoidance and disclosure The tax avoidance arms race is MAD: mitigation, avoidance and disclosure

The tax mitigation arms race between HMRC and tax advisors leads to a never-ending cycle of mitigation, avoidance and disclosure, says David Colom.

Does HMRC even know where its ‘better administration of IR35’ target is? Does HMRC even know where its ‘better administration of IR35’ target is?

If contractors agree to trial HMRC’s new IR35 framework for 12 months, how are we going to measure if ‘better administration’ has been achieved?

ContractorCalculator: Contracting news in brief - 18/May/2012 ContractorCalculator: Contracting news in brief - 18/May/2012

News this week includes the latest IR35 insights; P35 advice; contractor demand data; partial financial sector recovery; & HMRC service improvements.

P35 guidance: unsure contractors should answer ‘no’ to service co question, says HMRC P35 guidance: unsure contractors should answer ‘no’ to service co question, says HMRC

Contractors are not legally obliged to answer the P35 question 6, ‘Are you a Service Company?’, and if they’re unsure should answer ‘no’.


  
  

Twitter

  • Will the new Enterprise Research Centre dedicated to SMEs recognise the role of contracting businesses in the economy? http://t.co/ACE31fIm

    5 hours ago

  • HMRC defends it tax gap calculations claiming external estimates are misleading http://t.co/7RWvC7bq via @AccountancyAge

    7 hours ago

  • The tax avoidance arms race is MAD: mitigation, avoidance and disclosure http://t.co/9q1WMPjD

    10 hours ago

  • Does HMRC even know where its ‘better administration of IR35’ target is? http://t.co/L3MuqlFz

    Mon, 21 May 2012

  • IT leads surge in Scottish contract recruitment : Bank of Scotland Report on Jobs http://t.co/QIrLKFGb

    Mon, 21 May 2012

  • How might government's 'secret plan' to link civil service earnings to location affect public sector contractor rates? http://t.co/fJClb0HG

    Sun, 20 May 2012

Follow Us On Twitter


  
     

  
  

Contractor solutions

Contractors Handbook AM Limited IR35 Test
  
Contractor accountants - pricing checklist
  

Contractor solutions

Choice Premier Pay+

Take home up to 85% of your pay. IR35 solution.

Contractors Handbook

The expert guide for UK contractors and freelancers

Parasol Group

Umbrella or Limited? Guidance on best options, and take home pay.

InTouch Accounting

Person to person contractor accountant. Free IR35 review.

Bedouin Group

No more IR35. Retain up to 85% of your earnings.

NA D J Colom Accountants Bedouin Group Contractor Financials NewsNow
  
Elevate

  

The UK's leading contractor site. Independently audited traffic (ABC) – 156,346 monthly unique visitors.