Yesterday, a delegation from the Institute met with Minister for Finance, John O’Dowd MLA to discuss barriers to the all-island labour market resulting from the substantial tax complexity facing frontier and cross-border workers. Earlier this year, the Institute wrote to Minister O’Dowd
requesting this meeting to discuss solutions for those employers and workers affected by the byzantine tax compliance requirements. We had an engaging and productive discussion on the recommendations in our initial letter and we will be continuing to engage with Minister O’Dowd’s team as this important work progresses.
We also recently met with officials in the Department of Finance in Dublin to discuss the matter as we had
written a similar letter to Tánaiste Harris with his team noting the Tánaiste’s support for the work. We had a similarly engaging and productive meeting with the team in Dublin and we will be continuing to engage with them as they progress this work on their end.
Readers may be aware of the joint statement from Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and An Taoiseach Micheál Martin
following the UK-Ireland Summit in Cork earlier this year. In that statement, the leaders noted the following:
“We welcome agreement to engage on reaching a decision in principle this year on a bilateral Ireland-UK approach to address concerns arising from hybrid cross-border working and to consider other aspects of the UK-Ireland Double Taxation Convention which may require updating.”
When drafting our recommendations, we naturally had the possibility of a bilateral agreement as the potential silver bullet that could significantly reduce and even eradicate the substantial complexity currently faced by employers of hybrid cross-border workers.
It is particularly encouraging that Westminster will be engaging directly with officials in Dublin on the matter. Naturally, this work will require the engagement and input from Ministers and officials in Stormont. As such, the overall work to address the long-standing complexities may also open opportunities for the leaders in Dublin, Belfast and London to consider measures to support the economic development of Northern Ireland even beyond the labour market.