Remember that the purpose of Labour Supply Chain Assurance is to identify risks:
- Recognise signs of worker exploitation, including underpayment and unsafe conditions.
- Detect fraud schemes such as mini umbrella fraud and disguised remuneration.
Your assurance and due-diligence activities can be fully compatible with UK GDPR when you have a clear lawful basis, apply data-minimisation, and keep data secure.
Audits and Due Diligence
To conduct a GDPR-compliant audit, ensure you identify and document the lawful basis (typically legitimate interests for assurance; legal obligation for statutory reporting/requests; contract for paying workers).
Right to audit clauses should be included in any contracts, and workers should be suitably informed on their rights. Use the correct data instrument alongside the contract: an Article 28 DPA for processor relationships, or a controller-to-controller data-sharing agreement where each party decides its own purposes/means.
Explain that consent is usually not appropriate for audits (it’s not freely given in employment contexts and can be withdrawn). Use legitimate interests or legal obligation instead, with clear transparency. Sharing payroll details during statutory audits doesn’t require consent, but must be transparent and limited to what’s necessary.
Where audits intersect with data protection law
Certain aspects of your audit will undoubtedly come into contact with GDPR. The purposes of an audit are to ensure wage compliance, detect fraud, and prevent exploitation. Examples of this include: Verify PAYE deductions, National Minimum Wage adherence, and accurate payment structures.
Audit Objectives:
- Verify compliance with NMW, IR35, PAYE, and CIS.
- Identify potential risks like mini umbrella fraud or worker exploitation.
Similarly you will be required to maintain documentation. This includes:
- Keep detailed records of audit findings and data processing activities.
- Prepare for potential inquiries or reviews by data protection authorities.
- Update your Record of Processing Activities (ROPA), and ensure privacy notices (Arts 13/14) cover assurance/audit purposes and lawful bases.
- If audits involve special-category or criminal-offence data (e.g., DBS), ensure a DPA 2018 Schedule 1 condition and an appropriate policy document.
Consider including the following into your audit checklist:
- Confirm secure transfer (e.g., approved platforms, MFA, encryption in transit/at rest), role-based access, and audit logs.
- Document the purpose and outcome of audits.
- Prefer anonymised or pseudonymised/redacted outputs; anonymised data falls outside UK GDPR.
- If using offshore/cloud tools, assess international transfers and use the UK IDTA or UK addendum to SCCs where required.