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Budget Cancelled

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    #21
    Originally posted by Amanensia View Post
    Hmmmmm - after a little digging it appears that the private sector off-payroll rules are in the draft legislation planned for the Finance Bill following the 2019 budget, which has now been cancelled. I've had a quick trawl through the 2018 Finance Act and can see sections covering the loan charge rules but nothing talking about off-payroll working, or similar phrases.

    The draft legislation was published on 11 July 2019.

    So unless I'm missing something (and it certainly wouldn't be the first time!) further enabling legislation is required, which may or may not be passed in time for the new rules to come into force in April 2020.
    you are correct.... Not often Webberg gets it wrong, but in this case he did.
    It needs a budget, and a finance bill.
    Could the current government get a finance bill passed? I've been told that even with his lack of majority that a finance bill will likely pass as without it very few taxes can be collected from April 6th. Although I'd not rule anything out right now.
    See You Next Tuesday

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      #22
      I think the Banks are doing the thing they do on the back of every setback they encounter and they bring in a knee jerk reaction to reduce costs and as soon as one of them do it the rest will follow. Happened in 2008. If legislation doesn't happen it might accelerate them realising project delivery is being hit and to go back on the idea but I can't see the April 2020 changes not happening now.

      That said a lot of other clients are only just thinking about it so might yet be helpful to us.

      I can't see a Labour government reversing any changes but I could see it, essentially, aligning tax and employment laws and giving some employee rights to temporary workers.

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        #23
        Originally posted by SussexSeagull View Post
        I think the Banks are doing the thing they do on the back of every setback they encounter and they bring in a knee jerk reaction to reduce costs and as soon as one of them do it the rest will follow. Happened in 2008. If legislation doesn't happen it might accelerate them realising project delivery is being hit and to go back on the idea but I can't see the April 2020 changes not happening now.

        That said a lot of other clients are only just thinking about it so might yet be helpful to us.

        I can't see a Labour government reversing any changes but I could see it, essentially, aligning tax and employment laws and giving some employee rights to temporary workers.
        as well as making dividend tax rates broadly similar to income tax.
        See You Next Tuesday

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          #24
          Originally posted by Lance View Post
          as well as making dividend tax rates broadly similar to income tax.
          We'll be lucky. Labour sees dividends as unearned income for the rich made on the back of the workers. Prime target for "fairness" taxes

          Sent from my HUAWEI VNS-L31 using Tapatalk

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            #25
            Originally posted by Acme Thunderer View Post
            We'll be lucky. Labour sees dividends as unearned income for the rich made on the back of the workers. Prime target for "fairness" taxes

            Sent from my HUAWEI VNS-L31 using Tapatalk
            Labour sees there is avery unequal society. And wants to do something to make things a bit fairer.

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              #26
              Originally posted by BrilloPad View Post
              Labour sees there is avery unequal society. And wants to do something to make things a bit fairer.
              ... but unfortunately will make things far worse because they simply don't understand how things work.

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                #27
                This is good news, the reforms will be wither scrapped or moved back a few years. No budget means they can't push legislation through in time.

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                  #28
                  Originally posted by Unix View Post
                  This is good news, the reforms will be wither scrapped or moved back a few years. No budget means they can't push legislation through in time.
                  I'm not sure this is correct, but I must admit these are very confusing times.

                  As yet there has not been any official or even semi-official communication to indicate that the IR35 reforms will be delayed.

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                    #29
                    Originally posted by BrilloPad View Post
                    Labour sees there is avery unequal society. And wants to do something to make things a bit fairer.
                    meaning that instead of people aspiring to achieve things and raising their game accordingly, they'd rather drag successful go getters down to their level and pick their pockets.

                    Comment


                      #30
                      Originally posted by pjt View Post
                      Does this have any implications on the planned IR35 changes?
                      I understood that these can only be implemented if a budget containing the proposals is passed, which seems to be the general opinion here. However, NLUK has a different opinion.
                      Last edited by JohntheBike; 28 October 2019, 10:15.

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