Her Majesty's Revenue and
Customs (HMRC) learned key lessons from the initial roll-out of
IR35 tax reforms in the public sector, but faces new and
challenging risks in implementing the regime more widely,
according to the National Audit Office (NAO).
Off-payroll working tax rules
(known as IR35) were first introduced in 2000 to prevent tax
avoidance by ‘disguised employees' - people who do the same job
in the same manner as an employee but avoid income tax and
National Insurance contributions by providing services through an
intermediary. In April 2017, the government introduced reforms
which made public bodies responsible for determining the
employment tax status of all those it hired through
intermediaries. It did this to tackle high levels of
non-compliance which HMRC estimated cost the Exchequer £440
million in 2016-17. The reforms were initially introduced in the
public sector, and later extended to the private and third
sectors in April 2021.
Public bodies had little time
to consider HMRC's guidance and tools before IR35 reforms were
rolled-out. HMRC published guidance in February 2017, just two
months before the new rules came into effect. HMRC's key tool to
help public bodies comply with the reforms, Check Employment
Status for Tax (CEST), was launched in March 2017 with only one
month to go. HMRC's 2018 research found that nearly half of all
surveyed bodies found the reforms difficult to comply with, and
one of the most common reasons given was difficulties using
CEST.
In 2019, HMRC launched an
updated CEST tool which changed some features that users said
were causing difficulty. HMRC also made several updates to its
technical guidance, and began to work more collaboratively with
public bodies and other stakeholders.
HMRC estimates that between
2017 and 2019, at least 50,000 additional workers were on the
payroll of public bodies because of IR35 reforms. These people
previously provided services through intermediaries and paid less
tax. The net increase in tax revenue between 2017 and 2018 was
£250 million, more than HMRC previously expected (£150 million).
It is difficult to know the extent to which this is because of
the reforms, or other factors.1 Public bodies the NAO
spoke to said that difficulties finding contractors and rates
increasing were partly due to the IR35 reforms, but that it was
difficult to disentangle this effect from wider labour market
trends affected by COVID-19 and EU Exit.
The 2020-21 financial
statements of government departments and agencies include a total
of £263 million paid, owed, or expected to be owed for failing to
administer IR35 reforms correctly. In all cases, HMRC found that
the public body had not taken reasonable care to prevent errors,
including when answering questions in CEST.
Lessons learned from the
experience of implementing IR35 reforms in the public sector were
applied to the wider roll-out in the private and third sectors in
2021. HMRC continued to improve its guidance and its work with
stakeholders, and put more focus into educational activities to
help raise awareness and understanding of the reforms. It also
introduced further changes to address aspects of the reforms that
were not working as intended.2
According to the NAO, HMRC
faces ongoing challenges implementing IR35 reforms:
-
Labour markets in the private
and third sectors are larger, which makes monitoring
non-compliance a bigger challenge.
-
Complex supply chains are
more common in the private and third sectors. This creates a
greater risk of companies making errors when determining tax
status, and of the reforms resulting in workers changing
careers, or business moving overseas.
-
There is uncertainty over
HMRC's approach to non-compliance in the private sector. Its
assessments and penalties have so far only been tested on
central government bodies, none of which have been challenged
in court.
The NAO recommends that HMRC
further develops the CEST tool and accompanying guidance to make
it as easy as possible to use accurately. HMRC should also build
on its improved collaboration with stakeholders to pre-empt
further challenges.
, head of the NAO
said:
"The 2017 reforms to IR35 tax
rules have achieved their primary purpose of reducing
non-compliance. However, HMRC did not give public bodies
sufficient time to prepare for the roll-out, and it was it highly
likely that mistakes would be made.
"While key lessons were applied
during the wider roll-out in 2021, inherent differences in labour
markets create new challenges that HMRC will need to manage for
the reforms to be a success."
-
ENDS -
Notes for
Editors
-
For example, it is difficult
to disentangle the impact of the IR35 reforms from wider labour
market trends and the effects of EU Exit or other initiatives
or major projects in government.
-
Changes to IR35 reforms
before the private sector roll-out in 2021 included: measures
to mitigate unintended loopholes that saw a rise in alternative
arrangements to circumvent the IR35 rules, and a more formal
process for recruiting organisations to communicate status
determinations to workers and resolve disputes.