ESM3310 – Opinions on contracts: Case studies - tax bulletin article
One of the central questions in deciding whether the new rules
apply to an engagement is to establish whether the worker would
have been an employee of the client if engaged directly. The Inland
Revenue published guidance on this issue in a tax bulletin article
45A dated 7 February 2000 (see www.inlandrevenue.gov.uk/IR35). This
article contained three examples to illustrate the process for
deciding whether an engagement is employment of self-employment.
These examples are purely illustrative. They do not indicate
the IR’s view of the employment status of particular groups
of workers. However, members of the public are likely to refer to
them and, in the Judicial Review of the legislation (see ESM3281),
the judge refers to these examples as being helpful. The examples
are:
- Gordon, an IT contractor working through his own service company whose engagement would be covered by the rules
- Henry, a consultant engineer working through his own service company whose engagement would not be covered by the rules
- Charlotte, an IT consultant working through her own service company whose engagement is on the borderline
The article is contained in Tax Bulletin 45 and the examples are repeated in full at ESM3311, ESM3312 and ESM3313.
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