Employers will be given 30 days to admit to abuse of the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (CJRS), with legislation being fast-tracked to allow HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) to reclaim any furlough money that is overpaid to employers, or that is not spent on wages as intended.
More than 2000 employers have already been reported by whistleblowers for furlough fraud, with HMRC expected to follow up targeted investigations with random compliance checks.
According to the latest research, one-third (34 per cent) of employees have been asked to commit furlough fraud during the coronavirus lockdown.
The draft legislation mentions ‘deliberately’ making an incorrect claim or ‘deliberately’ not using the money to pay furloughed employee costs, which should give some reassurance to any businesses that may have inadvertently submitted a claim incorrectly.
The recent update to the CJRS also stated that the claims portal will allow employers to declare mistakes made in previous claims, and offset the over-claim against their next claim.
Guidance to the CJRS has been regularly updated by the Government, but it has always been made clear that if employers are using the scheme, then the furloughed employee must not do any work for them, which remains the case until the new Flexible Furlough rules are introduced on 1 July.
More than 9 million people have been furloughed through the CJRS, with around £20 billion being paid out through the scheme by 7 June 2020, and £7.5 billion being paid to 2.6 million self-employed individuals through the Self-Employment Income Support Scheme (SEISS).
If an employer has asked an employee to carry out any work, then they will need to prove that whatever they asked them to do was neither;
- Making money for them or any other businesses that may be linked, or;
- Providing services to them
HMRC may find that determining the employers who have submitted inaccurate claims accidentally, through negligence or a misjudgement.
This is why it is important that all employers that have used the CJRS now review the claims that they have made to ensure that they have submitted the correct claims for each individual.
For help and advice, contact our expert team today.