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Changes to the legislation

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13 years 7 months ago #152 by David J
Below is a press release from the European Parliament website regarding new rules for the late payment legislation.

Does anybody have an opinion on the 4 'new' rules?

Late payments: Parliament strikes deal with Council

New rules to ensure that small firms no longer face financial problems due to the late payment of bills by public authorities or companies were agreed by Parliament and Council negotiators on Monday evening. MEPs secured important concessions on the general payment and verification periods, the capping of payment periods by public authorities and the interest rate payable if payments are made late.

This new legislation updates the existing EU Late Payments Directive. The standard deadline for both public and private sectors to pay a bill for goods or services will now be 30 days. The Commission's initial proposal in practice left the deadline open for debtor and creditor to agree. But Parliament's negotiators succeeded in persuading Member State representatives to accept an EU-wide 30-day rule.

"I am extremely pleased that the Parliament achieved this general 30-day deadline for both public authorities and business-to-business transactions", said Parliament's rapporteur and chief negotiator Barbara Weiler (S&D, DE), adding that "Parliament has secured a level playing field and clear-cut rules for all players, to the benefit of Europe's many small and medium-sized companies. This deal means that SMEs will no longer be forced to serve as banks for public enterprises or big companies."

Four key points were settled in negotiations:

1. 60 days capping for public authorities: Only in exceptional circumstances can the payment period be longer than 30 days. However, Parliament fought hard to ensure that payment can never be delayed beyond 60 days for public authorities and that special justification is necessary for any extension of the payment period.

2. Interest rate and compensation: The statutory interest rate payable if a payment is late will be the reference rate plus 8%. MEPs initially pushed for a 9% interest charge. The 8% surcharge is a compromise with the Council, which wanted 7%.

Parliament and Council agreed to a fixed sum of €40 as compensation for recovery costs. Parliament's rapporteur believes that the initial proposal by the Commission of a multi-level compensation payment system was confusing and complicated.

3. For public entities providing healthcare: Member States may choose a deadline of up to 60 days. This is because of the special nature of bodies such as public hospitals, which are largely funded through reimbursements under social security systems.

4. A clear-cut verification period: The verification period for ascertaining that the goods or services comply with the contract terms is set at 30 days. This period may be extended only if expressly agreed and provided it is not grossly unfair to the creditor. Parliament secured an undertaking that verification periods may not be used as a loophole to delay payment unnecessarily.

Next steps

The agreement now needs to be approved by the full Parliament and is likely to be put to a plenary vote at the October session in Strasbourg.

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13 years 7 months ago #153 by jimbo22
It is good to see the payment terms being addressed.

Though there are still some grey areas:-

Such as the judge being able to remit the interest in the cause of justice.

We should'nt have to go to court all the time to enforce our rights under this legalisation, with the possibilty we could get a stupid judge who has this get out of jail free card for the defendant that he can use depending on his mood.

I guess EU directive makes it harder for a judge to kick a case out, but you just never know.

One thing is for certain the payment culture of the UK needs to change, too many small firms facing problems due to larger firms delaying payments.

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13 years 7 months ago #154 by latepayments
Hi,

Follow the link, I hope this is helpful, but clearly sometime before change will be introduced as UK law!!

www.europarl.europa.eu/oeil/file.jsp?id=5769082

Compensation for recovery costs: the committee specified that when interest for late payment becomes payable in commercial transactions the creditor is automatically entitled to obtain from the debtor, i.e. without the individual creditor’s having to take any action

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13 years 7 months ago #155 by ashley smith
The Meeting also agreed that all Member States must bring the legislation into place within 24 months. Further that the legislation is a MINIMUM requirement.

It's good to see the provision of a maximum of 30 days to raise a dispute. Couple this with Ruttle Vs Secretary of State and Creditors will no longer be able to withhold the full amount of an invoice where they have a valid dispute, although in practise many will and as is repeatedly highlighted throughout this site we will all more than likely still have to refer to lawyers and judges. This is my main concern... the legislation does not go far enough to address the problem of late payment.

The UK has two years to enact the changes although in reality most appear to already be enshrined. Hopefully the drums will be banged by UK business to ensure that we remain at the forefront of good practise with the possability of bringing in tougher legislation.

The full version of the meeting is being proofed by the legals and is due for publication by the end of next month.

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13 years 6 months ago #165 by David J
The revisions will effect other EU countries more than the UK. As Ashley has mentioned, most of the changes are already enshrined in the current legislation.

We have to hope that the compensation rate is not reduced to a flat rate of £40.00 for all invoices amounts. Also that the Public sector do not revert to 30 day payment terms after working towards payment in 10 days.

Also I notice in the link from Edward that the recommendation for multiple invoices is to add one compensation charge. I have read a revised version of this article on the europarl website but I cannot find it any more.

Are the changes are a step forward for the UK?

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13 years 6 months ago #167 by jimbo22
Regardless of the changes. It is important that more and more business learn how to use this legalisation.

However, it should not be used as a stick to beat the small business man, but rather a tool to bring fairness to those businesses which have struggled with cash flow, due to late payment by the larger companies, this is where I see in interest of justice.

I fail to see how the compensation can be reduced to the entire debt rather than per invoice/sales order. This simply would make the legalisation even more unworkable.

Will this be the debt falling due in 30 days, ie compensation for each monthly statement rather than each invoice. I dont think this would be a substantial remedy for late payment. Would it be ?

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