But critics accuse it of 鈥榠vory tower thinking鈥 over disputes resolution claims

The government has accepted all of the recommendations of a public accounts committee (PAC) report which criticised its roll-out of tax reforms for freelancers.

Reforms to IR35 tax rules were designed to punish 鈥渄isguised鈥 employment, where the contractor could provide similar services within the rules of a limited company but pay less tax as a freelancer.

Implemented in 2017, the reforms, which moved responsibility for assessing the tax status of contractors from the contractor themselves to the businesses engaging their services, were initially limited to the public sector.

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The government insisted workers who disputed their tax determination could file a self-assessment

The PAC report, published in May, found 鈥渨idespread non-compliance鈥 with more than 拢250m owed in back taxes, accusing HMRC of rushing the reforms鈥 implementation.

It claimed that hiring organisations were unable to properly assess workers鈥 statuses, workers could not challenge incorrect determinations and lack of good data and legislative provisions were leading HMRC to tax the same income twice.

The reforms were finally extended to the private sector last year, after being delayed by the pandemic, and have caused concern in the construction industry.

>>> Firms flouting IR35 tax rules face multi-million pound penalties as grace period ends

Last month it emerged that HS2 had set aside a 拢9.5m provision after getting its tax status wrong under the new rules.

The government agreed with the six committee recommendations, which included improvements to guidance and self-assessment tools and research into the impacts of the reforms on contractors and labour markets.

However, it disputed the PAC鈥檚 conclusions that high levels of non-compliance reflect poor implementation or that HMRC was not doing enough to understand the impact of the reforms.

The government agreed with the committee鈥檚 recommendation that HMRC should ensure there is a fast and independent process for contractors to resolve disputes over status determinations but insisted there were established appeal routes for those who disagree with their assessments.

Dave Chaplin, chief executive of compliance firm IR35 Shield, said this claim demonstrated 鈥渋vory tower thinking鈥.

鈥淭o suggest a worker can seek to reclaim monies from an incorrect assessment via the self-assessment tax system is misguided, because the worker cannot reclaim the bulk of the deducted monies, which is employers鈥 NI,鈥 he said.

鈥淭o suggest the worker can appeal to a tax tribunal is absurd, because the cost of doing so will far outweigh the tax and could take up to 10 years to resolve as we have seen happen.

鈥淭he government鈥檚 comments claiming there are 鈥榓ppeal routes鈥 is impractical nonsense and highlights the impediment to natural justice inherent in the IR35 reforms.鈥

A target implementation date of December 2023 was set for five of the six recommendations.

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