Mrs OBumble wrote: » More plausible is to consider what would happen if the Irish organisation recruited someone living in Poland or Latvia to do <<whatever>> job. In that case, you can be sure that the local salary rate would be paid.
Electric Sheep wrote: » Extremely dependent on skill set. The right skills = the right salary, regardless of location.
mvl wrote: » the right skills start in Irish universities, unfortunately for some domains. imo we would be paid only as much as we're worth in a global remote working work environment. on the question of how much of a pay cut would you get to wfh ... found this report -https://globalworkplaceanalytics.com/pros-cons ""A poll of 1,500 technology professionals revealed that 37% would take a pay cut of 10% if they could work from home."
mvl wrote: » Actually the environment I had in mind is multi-national already based here where wfh for permanent employees (not consultants) might become the norm. These companies are already present across those countries in Europe. Is wfh not meant to be possible from wherever in Europe someone has ties ? - ppl these days might have ties to few EU countries by means of citizenship/family or even property. If we are saying that local salaries would continue to be paid for remote workers - wonder how long till "local salaries" even taxes might be normalized at EU level for these workers.
Electric Sheep wrote: » No. In my experience, the right skill set depends on what you choose to learn on the job. The university means nothing after a couple of years, particularly in the IT world.
Mrs OBumble wrote: » A problem would arise if a worker from Ireland decided to work-from-home in, say, France. Because they are now living in France, local labour laws would apply. So immediately 35 hour weeks, right to disconnect, 5 weeks annual leave, workers council, etc. Just 'cos s/he moved to a new address..
Mrs OBumble wrote: » A problem would arise if a worker from Ireland decided to work-from-home in, say, France. Because they are now living in France, local labour laws would apply. So immediately 35 hour weeks, right to disconnect, 5 weeks annual leave, workers council, etc. Just 'cos s/he moved to a new address. Normalising taxes across the EU would be challenging - normalising labour laws would be harder, because they some from very, very different philosophical bases.
bilbot79 wrote: » I can't see why there would be an issue unless you were gone so long that you were tax resident in another state. The WFH guidance in my company states that you have to inform the employer if you are going to be abroad, get agreement etc and also states you must remain tax resident in ireland. If you spend 90 days a year working from home in another state I can't see why local labour laws would apply to you, you would be employed for all intents and purposes in Ireland
Augeo wrote: » Could employment contracts not include some legally binding spiel that you can't decide to work-from-home in, say, France ? Even something quite subtle like a requirement to be at a meeting in xyz location (the headquarters, local office, wherever close to home (not France) at any time during normal working hours with little enough notice?
seamus wrote: » ....... Aside from the requirement from some employers that an employee must be available to attend the office,...........
mvl wrote: » personally I would have thought if the contract stays with an Irish company - the number of hours a week cannot change to follow French model / same goes for the union stuff ... while the fiscal residency might need to change, so payroll systems need to be adapted to tax ppl differently, pending on where they live.
Augeo wrote: » Having a percentage of your staff WFH brings plenty benefit to employers & to the employees that it suits .......... there are enough big companies who will be happy to implement it. I doubt a tax break for employers will be required tbh.
seamus wrote: » There'll be a mixture of local and national barriers. Aside from the requirement from some employers that an employee must be available to attend the office, I expect tax laws will also adjust to compensate. So in the case you are employed by an Irish company, but living in France, the Irish company may be obliged to ensure that you have a PPSN and they pay PAYE to Revenue on your behalf. The French authorities will likely then require you to pay tax income locally too. And while you might be able to reclaim some of your PAYE from Revenue, it'll just be too complicated and difficult for most normal employees to manage. It will require the introduction of considerable flexibility in many global corporations. If you work for Twitter Dublin, but live in France, then you will "officially" be employed and paid by the French office, but organisationally you're part of the Dublin office. This is something that companies do at the moment on a limited scale, but it gets complicated. Internal accounting rules mean that the French office "bills" the Dublin office for the cost of paying the employee, and this involves various calculations and reconciliations. It's just pushing numbers around on paper, but it's a headache companies prefer to do without. I expect they will become more flexible on it though, and accountants will devise simpler methods of getting it done.
Kintarō Hattori wrote: » Halfway through this the attitude coming out of the company I work for was 'Why do we need so many people in the office?', 'this has shown us that we can work from home'. Now the attitude has shifted to 'A team in the office is always going to be more productive'. Depressing.
gladerunner wrote: » If working home becomes a thing, we could also use this opportunity to become more flexible in regards to working hours. As a mother to small children, i could work from home between 6.30am ( yes im awake then ) until 9.30am ( to do school drop offs ). I could then work from 10.00 to 2.30pm undisturbed. If my husband was afforded the same opportunity, we could get rid of the second car ( another huge drain in finances ). It could be life changing for some people.. really has the potential to get working parents off this mad threadmill of running and racing around.
Mrs OBumble wrote: » So if a French person decides to WFH in Ireland they would keep their French entitlements?
JimmyVik wrote: » Equally there are an awful lot who have the bums in seats attitude.
Technocentral wrote: » Public Sector is terrible for this attitude, you think the State would set an example on home working, but no. :rolleyes:
Biker79 wrote: » ....... rehired as contractors............ They have a higher burden of performance and are at a higher risk than the rest of us.