Employment law director at law firm Peninsula, Alan Price, reviews five important employment law developments.
- Deadline for gender pay gap reports
Gender pay gap issues have been in the spotlight for many months, but the first deadline for publishing gender pay gap reports for private companies is 4 April 2018. Once the deadline has passed, large companies cannot forget about this issue, as it is an annual requirement. The next “snapshot date” for private companies to collect pay data is 5 April 2018. Additionally, publicity on gender pay gaps is unlikely to decrease and employers may find their employees are raising more questions or complaints about their pay, and the pay of their colleagues.
- Minimum wage increases
Hot on the heels of nearly 180 employers being named and shamed for underpaying staff, the increases to minimum pay rates will take effect from 1 April.
National Living Wage – the minimum rate applied to workers aged 25 and over – will increase by 4.4 per cent, up to £7.83 per hour.
All other National Minimum Wages will rise from the same date, with those on the apprenticeship rate receiving a record 5.7 per cent increase from £3.50 to £3.70 per hour.
Employers need to be aware of these rate increases, as a failure to apply them correctly could lead to enforcement action.
- Changes to taxation of termination payments
In a bid to simplify the tax treatment of termination payments, the tax distinction drawn between contractual and non-contractual pay in lieu of notice (PILON) payments will be removed.
From 6 April, all PILON payments will be subject to normal deductions. For example, income tax and employee Class 1 national insurance contributions (NICs), regardless of whether there is a contractual PILON clause.
Employers who pay termination payments will have to carry out a complicated calculation to split the payment in to “post-employment notice pay” or “PENP” and the remaining balance. PENP will be taxable whilst the remaining balance is tax-free up to the £30,000 threshold.
- Auto-enrolment contributions on the rise
Alongside wages, employers will be responsible for increasing the minimum auto-enrolment contributions they pay towards workers’ pensions. From 6 April, it is compulsory for employers to contribute two per cent (up from one per cent) and employees have to contribute a minimum of three per cent (also up from one per cent). The minimum contributions will increase again from April 2019.
These increases are a legal requirement. A failure to increase contributions appropriately could lead to a daily fine and being publicly named for non-compliance.
- Tribunal awards to become more expensive
Employers who lose claims at tribunal will have to pay more in compensation from April as the maximum limits on tribunal awards receive their annual update. These increases come at a time when employment tribunal claims are on the up, with claims increasing by 90 per cent from October to December 2017, compared to the previous a year earlier. From 6 April, the maximum award for an unfair dismissal, totaling the maximum basic and compensatory award, will total £98,922 – a significant amount of money for any business.
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