goldfinger
- 09 Jun 2005 12:25
Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).
Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.
cheers GF.
MaxK
- 02 Jan 2015 11:14
- 54148 of 81564
perhaps the Cl drivers can get a payday loan, now the gov has made them "fair"
Payday loan caps come into force
New regulations introduced by the FCA mean loans will now be capped at 0.8% a day, as over 1 million borrowers benefit
Well over a million people will see the cost of their borrowing fall now that new price caps on payday loans have taken effect.
However, early indications are that many of the sector’s bigger players will be charging the maximum amount allowed to under the new regime, rather taking the opportunity to set their fees below the cap.
Interest and fees on all high-cost short-term credit loans are now capped at 0.8% per day of the amount borrowed. If borrowers do not repay their loans on time, default charges must not exceed £15.
In addition, the total cost (fees, interest etc) is capped at 100% of the original sum, which means no borrower will ever pay back more than twice what they borrowed, said the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), which has introduced the new rules.
Someone taking out a £100 loan for 30 days and paying it back on time will not pay more than £24 in fees and charges.
More good news here:
http://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/jan/02/payday-loans-caps-fca
Shortie
- 02 Jan 2015 11:28
- 54149 of 81564
It took far too long for the FCA to act on pay day lenders, this should have been done years ago.
MaxK
- 02 Jan 2015 11:32
- 54150 of 81564
It's still usury..
However, it appears the new regime will not spell the end of the huge annualised interest rates quoted on payday loan websites. Despite the changes, Wonga is still able to charge a representative APR of 1,509%, while QuickQuid’s site was promoting an APR of 1,212%.
required field
- 02 Jan 2015 11:34
- 54151 of 81564
Fred : this not the 18th or 19th century.....insular was how Britain probably was (and the better for it in my private view)....this is the 21st century ....
cynic
- 02 Jan 2015 11:42
- 54152 of 81564
Max - if CL don't own the vans, then there is no depreciation to be accounted ..... however, i suspect that the company that actually owns the vans will now be on for a pasting, for pretty obvious reasons
Haystack
- 02 Jan 2015 11:58
- 54153 of 81564
The Citilink redundancies are the workers working at the depots. The van drivers won't get any money owed as there are secured bank loans that will be paid out first and there is not even enough left to pay them. The workers will not get their redundancy money either from the company. That will be paid by us out of the public purse under a scheme that pays redundancy if a company cannot pay it. It will be the statutory minimum.
cynic
- 02 Jan 2015 12:03
- 54154 of 81564
as the drivers are deemed to be self-employed, i cannot see any way in which they are covered by the gov't redundancy scheme either
Shortie
- 02 Jan 2015 12:12
- 54155 of 81564
technically if your 'self-employed' you can't lose your job, you could lose a contract or a client but ultimately you are responsible for providing your own employment.
Fred1new
- 02 Jan 2015 12:19
- 54156 of 81564
RF,
You are right, but it seems many wish it the economic principles could return to your chosen periods.
To do so would be retrogressive for all if it did so. Some maybe cushioned to a small degree from doing so. A pretty bleak outlook of retreat rather attempting to resolve the problems.
Each to their own.
ExecLine
- 02 Jan 2015 12:55
- 54157 of 81564
The drivers are/were self-employed.
This is all about the definition of 'What is an Employee?'
and also
What is the definition which classifies someone as being 'Self Employed'?
- or allows them to be self employed and therefore prevents the firm they are working for from needing to collect Income Tax (PAYE) and National Insurance from such workers and also pay Employers Liability for National Insurance to HMRC?
Self employed workers are not entitled to redundancy. Neither are they entitled to unemployment benefit.
Thus the whole City Link arrangement was of great benefit to the government because:
1. It lowered the unemployment statistics. ie. Once the drivers became 'self employed' working for City Link that meant that the drivers were no longer unemployed.
2. Now that the drivers are out of a job the government does not have to pay them unemployment benefit.
3. It seems to me, that the City Link driver contracts, particularly the bits where drivers had to do 'this, that or the other' for City Link, eg. turn up for work, drive a City Link liveried vehicle, or pay a fine if they didn't do what City link insisted they do, actually qualified them to be properly classed as 'employees' of City Link and not self employed subcontractors.
4. Having self employed sdrivers also benefited City Link because it saved CL from having to buy vans and fuel and pay Employers Liability for National Insurance on those workers.
Importantly, the goverment is assisting HMRC to be complicit with what is surely an illegal arrangement as described in 3. above.
Why?
A. Well importantly, it helped the unemployment statistics.
B. Self employed people still pay Tax and NI.
C. Now that the City Link driver-workers are back on the dole, the unemployment statistics are not worsened in any way. They might have lost their driving contract but they are still technically self-employed.
D. The goverment do not have to pay out unemployment benefit to them.
And the illegality?
Wrongly categorising workers who, by the nature of their Contract for Services with a firm should more accurately be categorised as being employees of that firm and engaged under a Contract of Service.
Would any of you employed guys out there like to enjoy the cash flow benefit of not having to pay any Income Tax for at least 1 year? It will take around 1 year of trading to ascertain what your self employed profits might be. If everyone was to function in a self employed capacity, then the government would draw any PAYE every week/month.
Well tough! The government won't let you do it!
So why did the government let the drivers of City Link function in a self employed capacity? That for me, is a BIG Question.
Haystack
- 02 Jan 2015 13:00
- 54158 of 81564
They will get unemployment benefits. It takes longer and they have to declare that they are not self employed anymore. However, most of the couriers will be applying to other courier companies for work. Mind you, this is probably one of the lowest activity times for couriers apart from returns.
cynic
- 02 Jan 2015 13:26
- 54159 of 81564
EL - 54160 - you sound like the gobmeister :-)
CL are just one of a great many companies that insist that their "employees" are self-employed ..... and i agree it's an abuse in all sorts of ways
however, as these self-employed have to register with HMRC as such, it is a "one-horse racing certainty" that the contracts put out by CL (and all others) have been fully vetted and approved both by HMRC and the company's lawyers
though self-employed have to pay their own NIC, the gov't of course loses out by not receiving the employer's contribution .....
also, though as self-employed you do not get dole money, assuming other boxes are ticked you still qualify for other benefits such as housing etc
Haystack
- 02 Jan 2015 13:52
- 54160 of 81564
You will get dole if you cease to be self employed. The reason for no dole is that a genuinely self employed person will be running a business. There will be periods in that business when there are no customers and claims for unemployment benefit between customers would be somewhat odd.
ExecLine
- 02 Jan 2015 14:21
- 54161 of 81564
Cynic
From HMRC:
ESM4210 - Particular occupations: lorry drivers - general
Drivers who only provide their labour, driving vehicles owned, maintained, and insured by contractors, are likely to be employees. Drivers who also provide the means of transport, that is the vehicle, are likely to be self-employed even if they work mainly for one principal. The vehicle may be one which they own or lease (see ESM4211).
City Link were obviously using this paragraph to determine the nature of the employment or self employment.
My concern is to do with:
The enforced livery of the vans: ie. City Link livery only.
The enforced usage of the liveried vans: ie. City Link deliveries only.
For me, it was the enforced use of these two stipulations by City Link, which facts were not fully disclosed and were obviously omitted from HMRC questioning, which allowed the firm to get away with using self employed drivers and thereby escape all the 'Employer' responsibilities of employer tax collection.
I also see the benefit to the government of allowing this type of 'employment' to occur:
It helps the unemployment figures.
It encourages people into self employment.
All this is good - until it goes wrong.
Then we find that Income Taxes and National Insurance can't be/haven't been collected.
The rest of us tax payers then have to pick up the tab for it.
In this instance, those at the top of the City Link tree, ie. 'the fat cats', make quite alot of dosh for themselves leaving others to pick up the bill.
This City Link failure is a sorta kinda 'civil crime' rather than a 'criminal crime'. This type of crime is what our society is persistently suffering from, eg. similar to, say what the bankers did to us in 2006/7/8/9.
Shortie
- 02 Jan 2015 14:31
- 54163 of 81564
Phil Valentine, a contractor who has worked for City Link “on and off” for six years and runs six vans, dismissed the £43,000 figure. Once a driver paid for fuel, insurance and a weekly charge for a van, earnings would be more like £28,000 a year."
Surely if you use the above case Phil Valentine should be the employer as he owns the vans and other drivers are potentially working for him by driving them. Valentines contract would be to City Link. City Link would therefore not employ the other drivers..
Stan
- 02 Jan 2015 14:41
- 54164 of 81564
It's not the only outfit to pull the plug around the New Year is it, get the Christmas revenue in to get some of the losses back... and then fold it.
goldfinger
- 02 Jan 2015 15:17
- 54166 of 81564
Hays is right Cynic if you become unemployed when self employed you are eligible to claim
Jobseekers Allowance (dole to you) there is a means test and you have to have been resident here for so many years.
But its a right farce having to take all your books down to the Job Centre. I had to do the assessments when I was there and what a pig of a job it was especially with some of these self employed bringing in boxes and boxes of invoices.
If I can find it ill post up what you have to prove.
goldfinger
- 02 Jan 2015 15:25
- 54167 of 81564
Here we are....
Jobseeker's Allowance
To get Jobseeker’s Allowance you must be habitually resident and pass a means test. If you are self-employed, you may be entitled to Jobseeker's Allowance depending on your earnings from your business. You do not need to close your business or stop working as self-employed for you to get Jobseeker’s Allowance. You will get Jobseeker’s Allowance if your income is below a certain level.
Income from self-employment and the means test
The earnings from your business will be assessed in the means test for Jobseeker’s Allowance. The assessment must reflect the income you may reasonably be expected to get from your business over the next 12 months. Income for the last 12 months will be taken as a guide but allowing for any factors which it is known will vary. You should be prepared to discuss these factors when you are assessed for Jobseeker’s Allowance.
Earnings are assessed as gross income less work related expenses over 12 months. Your expected annual earnings from self-employment is divided by 52 to find your weekly means from self-employment. Any ‘drawings’ you take from the business is not an allowable expense. If your ‘drawings’ from the business are greater than the level of income calculated, the ‘drawings’ are assessed as cash income. There is no exhaustive list of all business expenses allowed because expenses vary with the nature and extent of the self-employment. However the following are the main allowable expenses in most cases:
Materials (supplies costs)
Motor running costs (portion applicable to business)
Depreciation of machinery or equipment
Insurance relating to the business
Telephone (portion applicable to business)
Lighting and heating (for business and not domestic use)
Advertising
Bank charges
Stationery
Van leasing
Any other costs associated with running the business (household running costs are not allowed as deductions against business profit)
To prove the level of income from your business you must give your receipts and payments (documentation showing money coming in and out of your business) or audited accounts to the person dealing with your application in your Intreo centre or social welfare local office.
When you apply for Jobseeker’s Allowance
Usually, you will be asked for your receipts and payments or audited accounts for the current and previous year. For example, if you apply for Jobseeker's Allowance in April 2014 you will be asked for your receipts and payments from January to April 2014 and for 2013. However, in certain cases you may be required to show audited accounts for the last two or more years. Find out more about signing on for a jobseeker’s payment.