Clients are increasingly using zero hour/ self-employed contracts which seems consistent with statistics suggesting that there is a national increase in people engaged under these type of working arrangements – currently in excess of one million (c. 3% of people currently working in the UK).
Whilst the benefits of these working arrangements are tangible in terms of the flexibility they offer both organisations and individual workers, businesses must remain wary of inadvertently creating an employment relationship instead, leading to a complex list of potential issues down the line – including rights to claim unfair dismissal and compensation, backdated PAYE liability and rights to redundancy pay too.
It often pays for a disgruntled worker to claim they are in fact an employee and in our experience, when things go wrong, they often do! They can then cause merry hell by raising tribunal claims and reporting businesses to HMRC.
An Employment Tribunal asked to determine whether a self-employed worker is, in fact, an employee will look at what is actually happening in that relationship and not simply what the contract says.
The paper is worth very little if the actual working arrangements ticks certain boxes.
The same applies to HMRC’s interpretation of arrangements from a tax and NI perspective – they too look behind the contract to establish if this is an ‘employee’ relationship or not.
Organisations must therefore be very careful to ensure that regular work arrangements do not create an expectation that work will be provided at regular intervals, overriding the self-employed nature of a true self-employed contractor.
They must also be alert to excessive control being exerted over the self-employed, to the extent that the flexible “don’t have to give work/don’t have to accept work” can be undermined.
These are just a couple of examples – getting this wrong can be incredibly costly for employers – we have seen this first hand with backdated employee claims being claimed.
Regular reviews of the actual practical management of working arrangements of any self-employed contractors you have engaged is essential to minimise exposure here, as is ensuring that the right documentation is in place to support the self-employed nature of these arrangements and that the system for engaging them reflects the lower control, arms-length nature of a self-employed contract – that all keeps organisations on the right track to successfully engaging true self-employed workers.
If you have concerns about the actual status of any workers engaged by your organisation or you want to ensure that you have in place contracts that are reflective of what is going on in your workplace and to minimise your potential liability here, get in touch with the team on: 01904 360 295.