IRS Cracks Down on Employee Misclassification
IRS Cracks Down on Employee Misclassification

I recently came across an interesting Wall Street Journal article discussing how the IRS has begun cracking down on employee misclassification. This is where employers misclassify workers as independent contractors to avoid payroll taxes and other employment-related expenses.  Many small businesses use contract workers in order to stay lean and, with the new healthcare changes on the horizon, using contractors is becoming even more enticing.  So what’s a small business owner to do?

IRS Cracks Down on Employee Misclassification

Here’s what the article says:

Internal Revenue Service auditors showed up with little warning at Brian Robinson’s staffing firm in Atlanta a year ago, seeking to verify that a dozen outside contractors he [hired] to handle his information-technology services weren’t… full-time staffers.
The audit was part of a government crackdown on employers who misclassify workers as independent contractors to avoid paying payroll taxes, and other employment-related expenses.
Mr. Robinson says the auditors ultimately found that his 30-year-old family business, TRC Staffing Services Inc., with its 100 permanent employees and up to 20 temporary workers, was in the clear. But he says the audit was “nerve wracking” because tax law doesn’t make it easy to distinguish between full-time staff and independent contractors doing full-time work. He says the legal distinction can be confusing even for an employer with his decades of experience in the labor market.
The appeal of using outside workers is growing as many small businesses struggle to stay lean. Some employers also are turning to contractors to avoid hitting the 50-employee threshold that would require them to pay for employees’ health insurance, starting next year, under the federal health-care law, or pay a penalty.

[Prevalence of Employee Misclassification]

State studies have shown that local businesses misclassify anywhere from 10% to more than 60% of their workers as independent contractors. Many business owners blame the complex tax code, which doesn’t offer black-and-white standards for telling the difference. The distinction is based on the employer’s degree of control over a worker, the length of the relationship, and a series of other factors. But such factors are open to interpretation. Past court cases on the issue have had different outcomes, providing little guidance.
In the past three years, the IRS, working with the Labor Department and officials in more than a dozen states, set a goal of investigating 6,000 employers, like Mr. Robinson, to ensure their workers are properly classified. Since September 2011, the government has collected $9.5 million in back wages for more than 11,400 workers who were misclassified as independent contractors by their employers, the Labor Department says.

[Boosting Tax Revenue]

The crackdown is aimed in part at boosting tax revenue. Employers don’t pay or withhold income taxes, Social Security, Medicare or unemployment taxes for independent contractors, as they do for staff workers. The U.S. Treasury estimates that forcing employers to properly classify their workers—while tightening so-called “safe harbor” rules that provide them with leeway in determining who is and isn’t an employee—would yield $8.71 billion in added tax revenue over the next decade.
Despite the threat of a payroll audit, more small employers are finding that independent contractors are essential to remaining competitive. The number of small firms that rely on outside contractors, for everything from technology services and public relations to marketing and sales, has grown sharply over the past five years, according to SurePayroll, a Chicago-based payroll-management firm whose clients are small employers.
The firm says that the proportion of contractors on the 80,000 small-business payrolls it processes every month has nearly doubled over past six years… [It has risen] to 6.7% last month from 3.4% in February 2007.

[Independent Contractor]

“As economic situations get tougher, that’s when everyone is looking to cut costs,” says Lisa Petkun… [Lisa is a] partner in the tax-practice group at law firm Pepper Hamilton LLP in Philadelphia. “It’s significantly cheaper to have an independent contractor.”
Using independent workers gives employers flexibility to hire only when there is work to be done, and leaves them with fewer tax obligations—and thus less paperwork—than do regular full-time workers. Using contractors also can cut benefits costs: they typically aren’t eligible for such benefits as health insurance and paid maternity leave.
A Michigan State University study estimates that contractors can save employers as much as 40% on labor costs. Indeed, some business owners say the IRS audits could stifle their ability to grow as demand picks up.
“I’m either going to hire someone full-time to do a job or we just won’t do it,” says Ciaran Dwyer, chief executive of 3t Systems Inc., a Denver-based IT company with 65 full-time workers. His firm relies on about a dozen outside contractors at any given time, depending on demand, he says.
Rather than risk an audit, and perhaps costly penalties—Mr. Robinson, the staffing-firm owner, says many of his small-business clients are rushing to convert any long-term contract workers into permanent staff.

[Payroll Audit]

Mike Johnson, a human-resources manager in Atlanta with over 35 years of experience with small employers, ranging from commercial insurance to telecommunications firms, says a payroll audit is a major disruption for a small business. “Apart from the legal expenses, the downtime is just not worth taking the risk,” he says.
In January, the IRS extended an amnesty program designed to encourage employers to voluntarily reclassify contractors as employees by waiving some penalties. Under the program, employers pay as little as 1% of the wages paid to their reclassified workers the previous year, rather than the full amount they owe in back taxes. So far, 1,000 employers have signed on since the program was launched in 2011, the agency says.
In recent years, Congress has proposed various bills to clarify the definition of independent contractors, including as recently as December, though none of the bills has passed.
Chris Whitcomb, tax counsel for the National Federation of Independent Business, a small-business lobbying group, says that without a clear definition of who counts as an independent contractor, many employers don’t know whether they are complying with tax rules “until they get audited.”

Does your business use contract workers?  If so, how will these changes affect you?  I’d love to hear your thoughts.
Read the original article here.
Download your free External Analysis whitepaper that guides you through overcoming obstacles and preparing how your company is going to react to external factors.

[box]Strategic CFO Lab Member Extra
Access your Projections Execution Plan in SCFO Lab. The step-by-step plan to get ahead of your cash flow.
Click here to access your Execution Plan. Not a Lab Member?
Click here to learn more about SCFO Labs[/box]

ARTICLES YOU MIGHT LIKE

Tax Brackets

See Also: Marginal Tax Rate Prepaid Income Tax Ad Valorem Tax Deferred Income Tax Cash Flow After Tax Tax Brackets What are tax brackets? Tax brackets are levels of taxation determined by income. Individuals with income falling within a certain tax bracket pay taxes according to the stated rate for that bracket. Typically, lower income

Read More »

Impact of FIT on Sustainable Growth Rate

The Institute of Fiscal Studies authored a study on tax systems in the UK called “Tax by Design: Mirrlees Review.” They concluded that “in the long-run, the tax system should be judged in part on its impact on the sustainable growth rate of the economy… viewing efficiency in a dynamic as well as static sense.” As we

Read More »

W2 Form

See Also: 401k Cash Flow After Tax Deferred Income Tax Form 1098 Marginal Tax Rate W2 Form Definition The W2 form definition is used by employers to report employees‘ wages to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The W-2 is also used to report the amount of taxes that have been withheld from each paycheck. W2

Read More »

JOIN OUR NEXT SERIES

Financial Leadership Workshop

MARCH 28TH-31ST 2022

THE ART OF THE CFO®

Financial Leadership Workshop

Days
Hours
Min

August 7-10th, 2023

SHARE THIS ARTICLE
WIKI CFO® - Browse hundreds of articles