Professional February 2018

Payroll insight

applied to both the higher rate and top rate respectively.

the private/voluntary sector and 31 March in the public sector. GDPR On 25 May 2018, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) will be implemented in the UK. It will apply to personal data processed within the European Union (EU), and to organisations outside the EU that supply goods and services to individuals within the EU. Many of the GDPR’s main concepts and principles are built on the current legislation which is the Data Protection Act 2008. It is no longer adequate to say you comply with data protection requirements; you will be required to demonstrate how you are complying. Appoint a data protection officer within your organisation (no matter how small). It is being widely mooted that transferring information by email is no longer acceptable, unless it is encrypted. There are fears that small businesses (or agents) will not be able to afford the software needed to encrypt emails. We are advised that it is possible to obtain such software easily and cheaply, but of course that is only one part of the equation. If you are an agent, how are you going to convince, persuade, cajole etc your clients to use it? With the GDPR in place every company will be required to demonstrate compliance; if not, severe penalties for breaches will be in place of up to 20 million or 4% of global turnover. So, you need to be prepared and this involves nominating staff for key roles, revising processes and procedures and liaising with third parties. For further guidance see Preparing for the GDPR: 12 steps to take now on the website of the Information Commissioner’s Office (http://bit.ly/1XLwlsA). The CIPP also run a half-day course on GDPR; details can be found under ‘payroll training’ on our website. n consultations due to be published this year so please keep an eye on our news pages to see how you can get involved. It is your knowledge and experience that provides the CIPP and policy team with the valuable detail to help influence policy change. This briefly sums up the changes for 2018–19, but there are several

termination payments over £30,000 will now start from April 2019. Other changes to the income tax and NICs treatment of termination payments will still have effect from April 2018, subject to parliamentary approval. These include income tax and class 1 NICs liability on all payments in lieu of notice and the removal of foreign service relief for employees resident in the UK. These changes will not require any changes to software. ...no longer adequate to say you comply with data protection requirements... Automatic enrolment changes On 6 April 2018, all employers will be required to increase the minimum contribution from the current level of 2% of qualifying earnings to 5%. Employers must increase their contributions to at least 2% and that of their staff increased so that the total minimum contribution is not less than 5%. On 6 April 2019, the contribution levels further increase, where the employer will be required to pay a minimum of 3% with the total minimum contributions needing to reach 8%. Employee contributions must make up the difference, which could be up to 5%. On 17 December 2017, the Department for Work and Pensions published their automatic enrolment review 2017 recommendations with two key proposals: to remove the lower earnings limit and to lower the age limit from 22 to 18. The government’s ambition is to implement the proposed changes to the framework in the mid-2020s. There will be discussions with stakeholders around the detailed design in 2018/19, finding ways to make the changes affordable, followed in due course by formal consultation with a view to introducing legislation. Gender pay gap The date is fast approaching where those employers in the voluntary, private and public sector that employ 250 or more relevant employees on the snapshot date will be required to publish their gender pay gap figures. The snapshot date is 5 April in

Gross Income (£)

Income tax rate

* £11,850–£13,850

19%

£13,851–£24,000

20%

21%

£24,001–£44,273 ***

41%

£44,274–£150,000 **

46%

Above £150,000 **

* Assumes individuals are in receipt of the standard UK personal allowance. ** Those earning more than £100,000 will see their personal allowance reduced by £1 for every £2 earned over £100,000. *** Note that this band and the next are subject to a change. Employers across the UK with employees who are Scottish taxpayers have little time to ensure that payroll software implement these changes. Human resources departments will also need to be ready to receive possible grievances from those employees who do the same job as a colleague but, because of their residency status, may pay more in income tax from April 2018. The CIPP ran a quick poll when the draft budget was announced, asking if existing payroll software will be able to accommodate these changes from April 2018. At the time of writing responses showed that 41% would, 10% would not, and the remaining 49% were unsure. Will your existing payroll software be able to accommodate these changes from April 2018? Postponement of NICs Bill In November 2017, the government announced that they would introduce the National Insurance Contributions (NICs) Bill in 2018. The measures it would implement will now take effect one year later, from April 2019. These include abolition of class 2 NICs, reforms to the NICs treatment of termination payments and changes to the NICs treatment of sporting testimonials. In light of the last-minute changes announced at Autumn Budget 2017, it would be advisable (if you haven’t done so, already) to check that your software can adapt to these changes. The one-year delay to the implementation of the NICs Bill means that the new employer charge on

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| Professional in Payroll, Pensions and Reward |

Issue 37 | February 2018

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