| Updated:
Britain’s companies are aimed at work from South Africans and other workers in WFH) in a cost -saving driving force for Dodge Rachel Reeve’s tax attack of £ 20 billion on employers and strict workers’ rights.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has talked about his determination to “put working people’s priorities first” while welfare cuts have been made to encourage inactive British back in the labor market.
But more service companies seem to have a view of applicants at home in favor of hiring workers abroad to fill roles that may not be covered by information published by Office for National Statistics (Wed), which this week showed that UK unemployment was at its highest level in over three years and vacant places that are released.
While employers have looked abroad to hire staff working in areas such as customer service, a new increase in companies that specialize in the recruitment of people in English -speaking countries proposes to go to the coast to avoid substantial employers’ national insurance contributions (NICS).
The recruitment company The Legends Agency, which has seen revenue increased from £ 300,000 to £ 7.2 million over a 12-month period, is such a company that hires workers in South Africa before being submitted in British companies in roles as British workers would otherwise fill.
The London -based director, Alex Fenton, said that Reeve’s business taxes had offered companies such as being an opportunity to grow, as foreign workers could make similar contributions to British workers 6,000 miles away.
“This used to be just too large companies,” Fenton told City is.
“What has happened to the small and medium -sized company (SME) market that is priced, you add it to the fact that you can get remote work, which has proven to work in many cases, small and medium -sized companies can certainly do it.”
The new tax rules benefit from WFH
Legends Agency’s staff amounts to 1,000 people before transferring them to about 145 British companies, which Fenton estimates can give £ 9 million in extra tax revenue if workers were based in the UK.
Employment taxes paid by South African companies to finance education are significantly less than in the UK, with a fee of one percent charged on workers earning more than about £ 20,700 per year
This is compared with the UK’s significant interest rate of 15 percent on a salary threshold of £ 5,000 per year after last year’s autumn budget.
Another agency called Sauce has to help a content marketing agency increase its revenue to $ 1 million (£ 736,000) by searching for WFH employees abroad.
It said that specialists and sales representatives who work practically in South Africa can earn up to 70 percent less in salaries as living costs in both countries differ dramatically.
The head of a currency exchange platform, which supports companies that work across borders but do not hire offshore home workers, told City is He had seen an increase of 43 percent in foreign payments in the last six months.
“The feedback from many of my corporate customers is also to hire overseas distant workers when feasible,” Tony Redondo from Cosmos Currency Exchange said.
“It is partly down to taxes, partly down to the new bill on employment rights.”
Colliding work cultures and the pace of work
WFH -SYDAFRIKEN AT British companies told City is that they found some difficulties in colliding work cultures and the pace of work.
No one talked about their intention to move to the United Kingdom, with the government raising qualified workers’ visa patterns as part of an attempt to slow down high net migration levels and prevent more low-income workers from arriving.
Any additional pick -up to the trend may affect London as Office for National Statistics (Ons) analysis in 2022 suggested that London accounted for 81 percent of the size of the UK’s service sector, which accounts for almost three quarters of the British economy.
Analysis of job data from HR Platform Employment Hero suggested that the growth of jobs in London stop, with an increase of only 0.7 percent in salary employees in April.
Treasury was contacted for comments.










