The announcement by the new Chancellor the repeal of Off Payroll regulations – along with the majority of the Mini Budget plans – will now be scrapped has caused consternation in the recruitment industry. Tania Bowers, Global Public Policy Director from the Association of Professional Staffing Companies (APSCo) has expressed anger from the trade association over the continued instability and lack of confidence:
“The Chancellor’s emergency statement has only served to add to the woes of the UK’s labour market,” she said. “The initial Off Payroll repeal was clearly a casualty of the large-scale reversal announced by Hunt where nothing from the Mini Budget was saved except those policies which were already in the legislative process. Every business across the UK has faced significant upheaval in the last two weeks where time and investment has quite frankly been wasted in addressing the initial plans and the subsequent market fall out of the former Chancellor’s announcement. In his statement, Hunt claimed that growth requires confidence and stability – elements which the UK’s economy has lacked for the last few weeks.
“The Off Payroll repeal arguably had no impact on the market fall we saw since the Mini Budget which demonstrates that the Government has simply reversed everything from the initial announcement that it could in what we feel is a panicked response to economic troubles,” Bowers added. “With so much instability at the moment, the country needs evidence that growth is on the agenda and that includes sustainable growth of the labour market as much as the wider business landscape.”
At the Recruitment & Employment Confederation (REC), CEO Neil Carberry, was equally concerned: “The most important part of generating growth is the hard work that needs to be done on issues like skills, getting more people into the labour market, and the tax system. There are no quick fixes. As we said last month, it is not enough to tear things down – we need to take time to build. Just as scrapping changes on IR35 did not solve the problem of a complex and poorly enforced system, keeping them will not make these issues go away either. We have had too many employment-related policy decisions drafted from the headline down – it is time to start working from the workplace up, in partnership with employers and employees.
Carberry continued: “Ahead of any further interventions by the Chancellor, incentivising business to invest in skills and make it easier to recruit and retain staff should be front of mind. One simple amend would be to finally reform the failed Apprenticeship Levy. The economy has suffered but demand in the UK labour market remains strong. Policies to maintain and increase that strength should be the focus as another mechanism for calming the markets and working towards a more productive, better paid workforce.”
Tania Bowers added: “As the country continues to face significant struggles, having access to a flexible labour market is crucial. Following the roll out of IR35 into the private sector, we saw reports of the county losing highly skilled contract professionals as they faced no choice but to take a full-time role. In fact, data from IPSE revealed in October 2021 that around 35% of contractors had left self-employment since Off Payroll rules came into effect. Our view that this regulation is not fit for purpose for the modern flexible workforce needs of today remains and we will continue our efforts to address this issue with Government bodies once again. While we understand that action was needed to bolster the UK market following the initial announcement of the Mini Budget, the on-going instability is detrimental to the growth plan that the Truss administration aims to deliver.
“Businesses have faced a period of significant unrest in a Post-Brexit and Covid hit economy,” Bower said finally. “It’s vital that the country is equipped to get back on track with the growth and levelling up agenda. However, skills under-pin the success of this aim. If the country is to once again to become an economic powerhouse, it needs the available talent to achieve this.”