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Latest NewsHR strategyPay & benefitsHR TechnologyPayroll

Pay delays likely as small firms ignore technology switch

by Mike Berry 2 Aug 2005
by Mike Berry 2 Aug 2005

Thousands of UK workers could face delays in getting paid in the New Year if employers fail to meet a December deadline for switching to an online version of the payroll system that allows them to pay salaries directly into bank accounts.


More than 90% of UK salaries and an increasing proportion of government social security benefits are paid automatically into bank accounts through the Bacs clearing house, which is switching over to a new online system – Bacstel-IP – from 1 January 2006.


But Bacs is warning of a potential payroll crisis because, with just over four months to the cut-off deadline, around 35% of firms have not yet started the migration to Bacstel-IP.


Mike Hutchinson, marketing manager for Bacstel-IP, said that while most large organisations have switched to the new system, a significant number of smaller businesses have not even started thinking about it.


“Small businesses really haven’t picked up on this in the same way the large organisations have,” he said.


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Firms that miss the deadline may end up having to pay staff late with cash and cheques.


“If any organisation keeps its head in the sand [and misses the deadline] it must speak directly to its bank. There isn’t another Bacs – companies will have to go back to cash and cheques to pay employees,” warned Hutchinson.

Mike Berry

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