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Over the Easter Weekend, the Government published a further update to its guidance on the operation of the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (CJRS).
The CJRS allows employers to retain employees on the PAYE Payroll who are not carrying out work for them by placing them on furlough and to claim a grant of 80 per cent of a furloughed employee’s usual pay, plus employer National Insurance Contributions (NICS) and minimum employer auto-enrolment pension contributions.
The updated guidance provides further clarification to employers on a number of points, including:
Information required to make a claim
Additionally, the Government has set additional information that employers will need to provide in order to be able to make a claim. The new full list of required information is:
IR35 in the public sector
Within the updated guidance, the Government has provided detailed information about how the CJRS will work for contractors working within the scope of the IR35 off-payroll working rules in the public sector.
The guidance states that it may be appropriate to furlough IR35 contractors deemed employees “in a small number of cases”.
The public sector organisation would then have to confirm this with both the contractor’s Personal Service Company (PSC) and the fee-payer and agree between the parties that the contractor will not carry out work for the organisation during the period of furlough.
The fee-payer – usually the agency that pays the PSC – will have apply for a furlough payment of 80 per cent of the monthly contract up to the £2,500 cap and the employer National Insurance Contributions (NICS).
The fee-payer will then need to pay the furlough payment in respect of wages to the PSC via PAYE and make the necessary tax and NIC deductions.
The PSC will have to report the payment to the contractor as deemed employment income via PAYE using box 58A on the PAYE Real Time Information return.
If a contractor opts to furlough themselves as an employee or director of their PSC, and they are still receiving an income from a public sector organisation, including through the CJRS, they must deduct this income from their reference pay for the CJRS.
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