How to react when a recruitment agency lies to a company about salary?
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I am temping for a company, and a week ago we found out that the recruitment agency has been lying to both me and the company about the salary. They are charging the company X dollars, and have told them that they are paying me %85 of X, but in reality they are paying me %60. Is there anything that can be done?
This calculation is valid both before and after taxes. And I know this because HR manager of the company showed me the agreement they have signed with the recruitment agency, and asked if I was being paid what the recruitment agency was telling them or not.
salary recruitment contractors
 |Â
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up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I am temping for a company, and a week ago we found out that the recruitment agency has been lying to both me and the company about the salary. They are charging the company X dollars, and have told them that they are paying me %85 of X, but in reality they are paying me %60. Is there anything that can be done?
This calculation is valid both before and after taxes. And I know this because HR manager of the company showed me the agreement they have signed with the recruitment agency, and asked if I was being paid what the recruitment agency was telling them or not.
salary recruitment contractors
how do you know?
– Kilisi
May 22 '16 at 23:16
@Kilisi Because HR department of the company showed me their contract with the temp agency
– iMan Biglari
May 22 '16 at 23:36
Just clarifying... You don't list a country, so is it possible you're receiving the 85% as contracted, but your net take home looks like it's 60% because the other 25% goes to things like taxes, insurance and retirement benefits?
– Kent A.
May 22 '16 at 23:53
2
You should at least complain to the agency. The same goes with your client employer. You could both complain at the same time, so that the agency doesn't give either of you the run around. Legally, there may be nothing you can do, especially if the agency was smart enough not put down in writing what it told its client, but if the agency cares about its reputation, it may be willing to come to a compromise and give you back you some of that money.
– Stephan Branczyk
May 23 '16 at 5:30
2
@StephanBranczyk The company told their lawyer to look into it, not for my sake, but for their own.
– iMan Biglari
May 23 '16 at 7:24
 |Â
show 1 more comment
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I am temping for a company, and a week ago we found out that the recruitment agency has been lying to both me and the company about the salary. They are charging the company X dollars, and have told them that they are paying me %85 of X, but in reality they are paying me %60. Is there anything that can be done?
This calculation is valid both before and after taxes. And I know this because HR manager of the company showed me the agreement they have signed with the recruitment agency, and asked if I was being paid what the recruitment agency was telling them or not.
salary recruitment contractors
I am temping for a company, and a week ago we found out that the recruitment agency has been lying to both me and the company about the salary. They are charging the company X dollars, and have told them that they are paying me %85 of X, but in reality they are paying me %60. Is there anything that can be done?
This calculation is valid both before and after taxes. And I know this because HR manager of the company showed me the agreement they have signed with the recruitment agency, and asked if I was being paid what the recruitment agency was telling them or not.
salary recruitment contractors
edited May 23 '16 at 0:31
asked May 22 '16 at 23:14
iMan Biglari
1156
1156
how do you know?
– Kilisi
May 22 '16 at 23:16
@Kilisi Because HR department of the company showed me their contract with the temp agency
– iMan Biglari
May 22 '16 at 23:36
Just clarifying... You don't list a country, so is it possible you're receiving the 85% as contracted, but your net take home looks like it's 60% because the other 25% goes to things like taxes, insurance and retirement benefits?
– Kent A.
May 22 '16 at 23:53
2
You should at least complain to the agency. The same goes with your client employer. You could both complain at the same time, so that the agency doesn't give either of you the run around. Legally, there may be nothing you can do, especially if the agency was smart enough not put down in writing what it told its client, but if the agency cares about its reputation, it may be willing to come to a compromise and give you back you some of that money.
– Stephan Branczyk
May 23 '16 at 5:30
2
@StephanBranczyk The company told their lawyer to look into it, not for my sake, but for their own.
– iMan Biglari
May 23 '16 at 7:24
 |Â
show 1 more comment
how do you know?
– Kilisi
May 22 '16 at 23:16
@Kilisi Because HR department of the company showed me their contract with the temp agency
– iMan Biglari
May 22 '16 at 23:36
Just clarifying... You don't list a country, so is it possible you're receiving the 85% as contracted, but your net take home looks like it's 60% because the other 25% goes to things like taxes, insurance and retirement benefits?
– Kent A.
May 22 '16 at 23:53
2
You should at least complain to the agency. The same goes with your client employer. You could both complain at the same time, so that the agency doesn't give either of you the run around. Legally, there may be nothing you can do, especially if the agency was smart enough not put down in writing what it told its client, but if the agency cares about its reputation, it may be willing to come to a compromise and give you back you some of that money.
– Stephan Branczyk
May 23 '16 at 5:30
2
@StephanBranczyk The company told their lawyer to look into it, not for my sake, but for their own.
– iMan Biglari
May 23 '16 at 7:24
how do you know?
– Kilisi
May 22 '16 at 23:16
how do you know?
– Kilisi
May 22 '16 at 23:16
@Kilisi Because HR department of the company showed me their contract with the temp agency
– iMan Biglari
May 22 '16 at 23:36
@Kilisi Because HR department of the company showed me their contract with the temp agency
– iMan Biglari
May 22 '16 at 23:36
Just clarifying... You don't list a country, so is it possible you're receiving the 85% as contracted, but your net take home looks like it's 60% because the other 25% goes to things like taxes, insurance and retirement benefits?
– Kent A.
May 22 '16 at 23:53
Just clarifying... You don't list a country, so is it possible you're receiving the 85% as contracted, but your net take home looks like it's 60% because the other 25% goes to things like taxes, insurance and retirement benefits?
– Kent A.
May 22 '16 at 23:53
2
2
You should at least complain to the agency. The same goes with your client employer. You could both complain at the same time, so that the agency doesn't give either of you the run around. Legally, there may be nothing you can do, especially if the agency was smart enough not put down in writing what it told its client, but if the agency cares about its reputation, it may be willing to come to a compromise and give you back you some of that money.
– Stephan Branczyk
May 23 '16 at 5:30
You should at least complain to the agency. The same goes with your client employer. You could both complain at the same time, so that the agency doesn't give either of you the run around. Legally, there may be nothing you can do, especially if the agency was smart enough not put down in writing what it told its client, but if the agency cares about its reputation, it may be willing to come to a compromise and give you back you some of that money.
– Stephan Branczyk
May 23 '16 at 5:30
2
2
@StephanBranczyk The company told their lawyer to look into it, not for my sake, but for their own.
– iMan Biglari
May 23 '16 at 7:24
@StephanBranczyk The company told their lawyer to look into it, not for my sake, but for their own.
– iMan Biglari
May 23 '16 at 7:24
 |Â
show 1 more comment
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
Based on the edit to the question, it appears that the employer already suspects the agency of some wrongdoing. Unless your contract with the agency prohibits your disclosing the details of your contract/pay with their customers (your current job), you should answer their question honestly, and let the company do what it feels it must do.
You need a new agency, either way. Either this incident upsets them and they end their relationship with you, or it upsets you and you end your relationship with them. Surely there are other agencies and employment arrangements you can find.
Sorry that you feel you're being taken advantage of. Good luck!
There is no clause in my contract preventing me from discussing my pay with the company, and I did. I'd be lying if I were to say I don't feel like being taken advantage of, but the fact is, what the agency is paying me is already above the normal rate. Right now I am more concerned about how to respond when a recruitment agency contacts me in the future?
– iMan Biglari
May 23 '16 at 7:22
2
@iManBiglari From your perspective, any other recruiting agency you might work with will have its own arrangements with their own clients. You should tell them what your salary expectations are, just like you would with a direct hire scenario. Let them figure out the details of their arrangements with the clients to make it work for you. The only reason this current arrangement isn't satisfying is because someone has made you aware that you might be earning more. If you're happy with the pay, that's what matters.
– Kent A.
May 23 '16 at 12:06
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
Outside of talking to a lawyer and closely examining your contract, you should definitely never work with that agency again. Suggest to your employer to do the same.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
You have a contract with the agency, and the company that you are doing work for has a contract with the agency. Does the agency fulfil your contract? In that case, you can't do anything. On the other hand, the agency doesn't seem to fulfil the contract with the company. If their contract says that the company pays $X and the agency keeps 15% and pays 85% to you, but the agency pays only 60% to you, then the company can demand that either the remaining 25% are paid to you, or that their payments are reduced so that the money you receive is 85% of what you pay.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
2
down vote
If you are contracted to get 85% of X then I would inform the agency that you are being underpaid and ask for an explanation. If you are contracted for a set amount then you have no realistic options apart from moving on.
suggest improvements |Â
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
Based on the edit to the question, it appears that the employer already suspects the agency of some wrongdoing. Unless your contract with the agency prohibits your disclosing the details of your contract/pay with their customers (your current job), you should answer their question honestly, and let the company do what it feels it must do.
You need a new agency, either way. Either this incident upsets them and they end their relationship with you, or it upsets you and you end your relationship with them. Surely there are other agencies and employment arrangements you can find.
Sorry that you feel you're being taken advantage of. Good luck!
There is no clause in my contract preventing me from discussing my pay with the company, and I did. I'd be lying if I were to say I don't feel like being taken advantage of, but the fact is, what the agency is paying me is already above the normal rate. Right now I am more concerned about how to respond when a recruitment agency contacts me in the future?
– iMan Biglari
May 23 '16 at 7:22
2
@iManBiglari From your perspective, any other recruiting agency you might work with will have its own arrangements with their own clients. You should tell them what your salary expectations are, just like you would with a direct hire scenario. Let them figure out the details of their arrangements with the clients to make it work for you. The only reason this current arrangement isn't satisfying is because someone has made you aware that you might be earning more. If you're happy with the pay, that's what matters.
– Kent A.
May 23 '16 at 12:06
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
Based on the edit to the question, it appears that the employer already suspects the agency of some wrongdoing. Unless your contract with the agency prohibits your disclosing the details of your contract/pay with their customers (your current job), you should answer their question honestly, and let the company do what it feels it must do.
You need a new agency, either way. Either this incident upsets them and they end their relationship with you, or it upsets you and you end your relationship with them. Surely there are other agencies and employment arrangements you can find.
Sorry that you feel you're being taken advantage of. Good luck!
There is no clause in my contract preventing me from discussing my pay with the company, and I did. I'd be lying if I were to say I don't feel like being taken advantage of, but the fact is, what the agency is paying me is already above the normal rate. Right now I am more concerned about how to respond when a recruitment agency contacts me in the future?
– iMan Biglari
May 23 '16 at 7:22
2
@iManBiglari From your perspective, any other recruiting agency you might work with will have its own arrangements with their own clients. You should tell them what your salary expectations are, just like you would with a direct hire scenario. Let them figure out the details of their arrangements with the clients to make it work for you. The only reason this current arrangement isn't satisfying is because someone has made you aware that you might be earning more. If you're happy with the pay, that's what matters.
– Kent A.
May 23 '16 at 12:06
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
up vote
7
down vote
accepted
Based on the edit to the question, it appears that the employer already suspects the agency of some wrongdoing. Unless your contract with the agency prohibits your disclosing the details of your contract/pay with their customers (your current job), you should answer their question honestly, and let the company do what it feels it must do.
You need a new agency, either way. Either this incident upsets them and they end their relationship with you, or it upsets you and you end your relationship with them. Surely there are other agencies and employment arrangements you can find.
Sorry that you feel you're being taken advantage of. Good luck!
Based on the edit to the question, it appears that the employer already suspects the agency of some wrongdoing. Unless your contract with the agency prohibits your disclosing the details of your contract/pay with their customers (your current job), you should answer their question honestly, and let the company do what it feels it must do.
You need a new agency, either way. Either this incident upsets them and they end their relationship with you, or it upsets you and you end your relationship with them. Surely there are other agencies and employment arrangements you can find.
Sorry that you feel you're being taken advantage of. Good luck!
answered May 23 '16 at 0:43
Kent A.
18.9k75474
18.9k75474
There is no clause in my contract preventing me from discussing my pay with the company, and I did. I'd be lying if I were to say I don't feel like being taken advantage of, but the fact is, what the agency is paying me is already above the normal rate. Right now I am more concerned about how to respond when a recruitment agency contacts me in the future?
– iMan Biglari
May 23 '16 at 7:22
2
@iManBiglari From your perspective, any other recruiting agency you might work with will have its own arrangements with their own clients. You should tell them what your salary expectations are, just like you would with a direct hire scenario. Let them figure out the details of their arrangements with the clients to make it work for you. The only reason this current arrangement isn't satisfying is because someone has made you aware that you might be earning more. If you're happy with the pay, that's what matters.
– Kent A.
May 23 '16 at 12:06
suggest improvements |Â
There is no clause in my contract preventing me from discussing my pay with the company, and I did. I'd be lying if I were to say I don't feel like being taken advantage of, but the fact is, what the agency is paying me is already above the normal rate. Right now I am more concerned about how to respond when a recruitment agency contacts me in the future?
– iMan Biglari
May 23 '16 at 7:22
2
@iManBiglari From your perspective, any other recruiting agency you might work with will have its own arrangements with their own clients. You should tell them what your salary expectations are, just like you would with a direct hire scenario. Let them figure out the details of their arrangements with the clients to make it work for you. The only reason this current arrangement isn't satisfying is because someone has made you aware that you might be earning more. If you're happy with the pay, that's what matters.
– Kent A.
May 23 '16 at 12:06
There is no clause in my contract preventing me from discussing my pay with the company, and I did. I'd be lying if I were to say I don't feel like being taken advantage of, but the fact is, what the agency is paying me is already above the normal rate. Right now I am more concerned about how to respond when a recruitment agency contacts me in the future?
– iMan Biglari
May 23 '16 at 7:22
There is no clause in my contract preventing me from discussing my pay with the company, and I did. I'd be lying if I were to say I don't feel like being taken advantage of, but the fact is, what the agency is paying me is already above the normal rate. Right now I am more concerned about how to respond when a recruitment agency contacts me in the future?
– iMan Biglari
May 23 '16 at 7:22
2
2
@iManBiglari From your perspective, any other recruiting agency you might work with will have its own arrangements with their own clients. You should tell them what your salary expectations are, just like you would with a direct hire scenario. Let them figure out the details of their arrangements with the clients to make it work for you. The only reason this current arrangement isn't satisfying is because someone has made you aware that you might be earning more. If you're happy with the pay, that's what matters.
– Kent A.
May 23 '16 at 12:06
@iManBiglari From your perspective, any other recruiting agency you might work with will have its own arrangements with their own clients. You should tell them what your salary expectations are, just like you would with a direct hire scenario. Let them figure out the details of their arrangements with the clients to make it work for you. The only reason this current arrangement isn't satisfying is because someone has made you aware that you might be earning more. If you're happy with the pay, that's what matters.
– Kent A.
May 23 '16 at 12:06
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
Outside of talking to a lawyer and closely examining your contract, you should definitely never work with that agency again. Suggest to your employer to do the same.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
Outside of talking to a lawyer and closely examining your contract, you should definitely never work with that agency again. Suggest to your employer to do the same.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
Outside of talking to a lawyer and closely examining your contract, you should definitely never work with that agency again. Suggest to your employer to do the same.
Outside of talking to a lawyer and closely examining your contract, you should definitely never work with that agency again. Suggest to your employer to do the same.
answered May 23 '16 at 6:35


Magisch
16.5k134776
16.5k134776
suggest improvements |Â
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
You have a contract with the agency, and the company that you are doing work for has a contract with the agency. Does the agency fulfil your contract? In that case, you can't do anything. On the other hand, the agency doesn't seem to fulfil the contract with the company. If their contract says that the company pays $X and the agency keeps 15% and pays 85% to you, but the agency pays only 60% to you, then the company can demand that either the remaining 25% are paid to you, or that their payments are reduced so that the money you receive is 85% of what you pay.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
You have a contract with the agency, and the company that you are doing work for has a contract with the agency. Does the agency fulfil your contract? In that case, you can't do anything. On the other hand, the agency doesn't seem to fulfil the contract with the company. If their contract says that the company pays $X and the agency keeps 15% and pays 85% to you, but the agency pays only 60% to you, then the company can demand that either the remaining 25% are paid to you, or that their payments are reduced so that the money you receive is 85% of what you pay.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
You have a contract with the agency, and the company that you are doing work for has a contract with the agency. Does the agency fulfil your contract? In that case, you can't do anything. On the other hand, the agency doesn't seem to fulfil the contract with the company. If their contract says that the company pays $X and the agency keeps 15% and pays 85% to you, but the agency pays only 60% to you, then the company can demand that either the remaining 25% are paid to you, or that their payments are reduced so that the money you receive is 85% of what you pay.
You have a contract with the agency, and the company that you are doing work for has a contract with the agency. Does the agency fulfil your contract? In that case, you can't do anything. On the other hand, the agency doesn't seem to fulfil the contract with the company. If their contract says that the company pays $X and the agency keeps 15% and pays 85% to you, but the agency pays only 60% to you, then the company can demand that either the remaining 25% are paid to you, or that their payments are reduced so that the money you receive is 85% of what you pay.
answered May 22 '16 at 23:45
gnasher729
70.7k31131221
70.7k31131221
suggest improvements |Â
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
2
down vote
If you are contracted to get 85% of X then I would inform the agency that you are being underpaid and ask for an explanation. If you are contracted for a set amount then you have no realistic options apart from moving on.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
2
down vote
If you are contracted to get 85% of X then I would inform the agency that you are being underpaid and ask for an explanation. If you are contracted for a set amount then you have no realistic options apart from moving on.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
If you are contracted to get 85% of X then I would inform the agency that you are being underpaid and ask for an explanation. If you are contracted for a set amount then you have no realistic options apart from moving on.
If you are contracted to get 85% of X then I would inform the agency that you are being underpaid and ask for an explanation. If you are contracted for a set amount then you have no realistic options apart from moving on.
answered May 22 '16 at 23:46


Kilisi
94.5k50216376
94.5k50216376
suggest improvements |Â
suggest improvements |Â
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how do you know?
– Kilisi
May 22 '16 at 23:16
@Kilisi Because HR department of the company showed me their contract with the temp agency
– iMan Biglari
May 22 '16 at 23:36
Just clarifying... You don't list a country, so is it possible you're receiving the 85% as contracted, but your net take home looks like it's 60% because the other 25% goes to things like taxes, insurance and retirement benefits?
– Kent A.
May 22 '16 at 23:53
2
You should at least complain to the agency. The same goes with your client employer. You could both complain at the same time, so that the agency doesn't give either of you the run around. Legally, there may be nothing you can do, especially if the agency was smart enough not put down in writing what it told its client, but if the agency cares about its reputation, it may be willing to come to a compromise and give you back you some of that money.
– Stephan Branczyk
May 23 '16 at 5:30
2
@StephanBranczyk The company told their lawyer to look into it, not for my sake, but for their own.
– iMan Biglari
May 23 '16 at 7:24