Title: COMPUTING WAGES
1CHAPTER 2
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Payroll Accounting 2009 Bernard J. Bieg and
Judith A. Toland
Developed by Lisa Swallow, CPA CMA MS
2Fair Labor Standards Act FLSA
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- Federal Wage Hour Law provides for
- two types of coverage
- Enterprise coverage includes all EE if
- Two or more work in interstate commerce and
- 500,000 or more annual gross sales or produce
goods for interstate commerce - Plus many nonprofits (schools, public agencies,
etc.) regardless of annual sales volume - OR
- Individual employee coverage
- EE whose company may not meet enterprise
coverage, but are in a fringe occupation - For example drive for fleet that transports
goods, but annual revenues 225,000 -
- Many family businesses are exempt!
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3Employee Employer Defined
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- An employer is an individual who acts
directly/indirectly in the interest of an
employer in relation to an employee - An individual is an employee if he/she performs
services in a covered employment - Common-law
- IRS test based on
- Behavioral control
- Financial control
- Relationship between two parties
- Statutory nonemployees considered self-employed
- Direct sellers and licensed real estate agents
4FLSA Domestics
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- Domestic help includes nannies, gardeners,
chauffeurs, etc. - These employees must earn minimum wage and
overtime if - Work more than 8 hours/week or if
- Earn at least 1,000 in a calendar year
- Live in domestics need not be paid overtime
5What is Minimum Wage?
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- Includes all rates of pay including, but not
limited to - Commissions
- Bonuses and severance pay
- On-call or differential
- Exceptions to minimum wage
- Training wage for first 90 calendar days of
employment for newly hired EE under age 20 - Retail or service establishments and farms
employing FT students - 85 - FT students employed at their own university -
85 - Student learners at Vocational/Technical school -
75 - Physically or mentally impaired employees with
certification
6Minimum Wage vs. Living Wage
- Minimum wage
- 6.55 until July 24, 2009 then to
- 7.25 This text uses 7.25 in all calculations!
- Living wage
- 100 cities have local laws requiring Employers
that do business with government to pay a living
wage - Attempts to keep working poors wages on track
with cost of living
7Tipped Employees
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- Tipped employee regularly averages 30/month in
tips - Small Business Job Protection Act froze minimum
tipped wages at 2.13/hour, therefore tip credit
5.12/hour - EE still must make 7.25/hour when combining
tips/wages (7.25 x 40 290 minimum weekly
gross) - Examples of tips received for 40-hour work week
- 1. Reported tips 43
- Is 85.20 (minimum tipped wage) 43 gt 290
- No - (290 - 43 247) so ER must pay additional
wages - 2. Reported tips 1189
- Is 85.20 1189 gt 290
- Yes - so ER pays 85.20 wages
- 3. Reported tips 111
- Is 85.20 111 gt 290
- No - (290 - 111 179) so ER must pay
additional wages
40 hours x 2.13/hour 85.20
8Tipped Employee Rules
- Credit card tips must be paid out to the employee
by the next payday - If employee works more than one job, tip credit
can only be applied to job that qualifies as
tipped - If a states tip credit differs from the federal
tip credit, employer must calculate and pay their
employees the higher cash wage - Tip credit is same in overtime hours (5.12/hour)
9Overtime Provisions Exceptions
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- Work week established by corporate policy
- For example 1201 a.m. Saturday - 1159 p.m.
Friday - Seven consecutive 24-hour periods
- Some states require daily overtime (OT) over 8
hours - FLSA sets OT at 1.5 times regular pay
- Exception 1 - Hospital EE, overtime for 80
hours in 14 days or over 8 hours in a day - Exception 2 - Retail workers earning commission
(special rules) - Exception 3 - EE in public safety or emergency
response can accumulate 320 hours x 1.5 480
hours compensatory time instead of OT - Exception 4 - EE whose work doesnt include
activities from exception 3, can accumulate 160
hours x 1.5 240 hours compensatory time instead
of OT
10Exempt vs. Nonexempt
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- Exempt means exempt from overtime provisions of
FLSA - White-collar workers
- Executives
- Professional
- Administrative
- Highly compensated employees
- Computer professionals
- Outside sales (no salary test for this category)
- Test of exemption
- Employee must be paid on salary basis
- See Figure 2-2 (p. 2-10) in text - certain
primary duty requirements must be met - Blue collar workers are always entitled to
overtime pay - Putting someone on salary
- doesnt mean he/she is exempt!!
To be considered exempt, must be paid at least
455/week
11Equal Pay Act
- Amended the FLSA
- Requires men and women performing equal jobs
receive equal pay - Applies to white-collar workers and outside
salespeople as well as nonexempt workers
12Child Labor Restrictions
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- Minimum age for most jobs is 16
- Under age 18 cannot work in hazardous jobs
- Employees age 16 and 17 may work unlimited number
of hours each week in nonhazardous jobs - Under 16 years old limited to employment in
retail and food/gas service - Only 7 a.m. - 7 p.m. (until 9 p.m. allowed in
summer) - 3 hours per day - 18 hours per week school year
- 8 hours per day - 40 hours per week summer
- In agricultural occupations an employee as young
as 10 can work - Only from 6/1 - 10/15
- Hand harvest laborers outside school hours only
- Subject to many strict limitations
- ER needs to have Certificate of Age on file
- Violations can result in up to 10,000/offense
cant discharge an EE whom has filed a wage-hour
complaint!
13What the FLSA Does Not Cover
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- Employers are not required to
- Pay extra for weekend/holiday work
- Pay for holidays or vacation
- Limit number of hours of work for persons 16
years of age or over - Give holidays off
- Grant vacation time
- Grant sick leave
14Determining Employees Work Time
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- Prep at work station is principal activity
- In some situations changing in/out of protective
gear may be part of workday - Idle time
- Travel (when part of principal workday) is
compensable - On call time is not principal activity if
employee can spend time as he/she chooses - Rest periods under 20 minutes are principal
activities (cant make EE check out) - Meal periods are not compensable time unless
employee must perform some tasks while eating
generally 30 minutes or longer - Work at home is principal activity if nonexempt
employee - Sleep time is principal activity if required to
be on duty less than 24 hours - Training (when for ER benefit/required) is
compensable
15Noncompensable Activities
- Preliminary and postliminary activities
- Portal-to-Portal Act defines these activities
- Need not be counted unless customary or
contractual - For example checking in/out of plant
- Absences due to illness
- Tardiness may result in docked time, based upon
system in place - Must be paid for fractional parts of an hour
16Timekeeping
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- FLSA requires employers to retain time/pay
records - Employer in traditional office environment can
use - Time sheet
- Time cards
- Computerized time/attendance records, main kinds
include - Card-generated systems (computerized totals)
- Badge systems (microchips or bar codes)
- Cardless or badgeless system - EE enters
identification number - PC-based system
- Next generation technology
- Touch screen (PC screen reads touch input)
- Internet wireless transmission (cell phones,
Personal Digital Assistants) - Biometrics unique characteristic such as iris
scan or whole face
17Pay Periods Methods of Computing Wages/Salaries
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- Biweekly (26) - same hours each pay period
- Semi-monthly (24) - different hours each pay
period - Monthly (12)- different hours each pay period
- Weekly (52) - same hours each pay period
- ER can have different pay periods for
- different groups within same company!
18Calculating Overtime Pay
- There are two methods
- Most common method
- Calculate gross pay (40 hrs. x employees regular
rate) - OT rate then calculated by multiplying 1.5 x
employees regular rate x hours in excess of 40 - Other method
- Calculate gross pay (all hours worked x
employees regular rate) - Then calculate an overtime premium (hours in
excess of 40 x overtime premium rate) - Hourly rate x ½ overtime premium rate
- These methods result in same total gross pay!
19Steps to Follow When Converting Period Wage
Rates to Hourly Rates
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- Annualize salary
- Calculate regular gross
- Calculate hourly pay
- Calculate overtime (OT) rate
- (1.5 x hourly rate)
- Add OT pay to regular gross
20Example 1 - Calculating Gross Paycheck
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- FACTS Salary quoted is 1,500/month - paid
weekly - 43 hours in one pay period - 1,500 x 12 18,000 annual
- 18,000/52 346.15 weekly gross
- 18,000/2,080 hours 8.65 regular rate
- 8.65 x 1.5 12.98 OT rate
- 346.15 (12.98 x 3) 385.09 gross
21Example 2 - Calculating Gross Paycheck
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- FACTS Salary quoted is 2,000/month paid
semimonthly - 4 hours OT in one pay period - 2,000 x 12 24,000 annual
- 24,000/24 1,000 semimonthly gross
- 24,000/2080 11.54 regular rate
- 11.54 x 1.5 17.31 OT rate
- 1,000 (17.31 x 4) 1,069.24 gross
22Example 3 - Calculating Gross Paycheck
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- FACTS Salary quoted is 2,000/month for 38 hour
work week - paid semimonthly. Two rates in
addition to semimonthly gross regular pay
between 38-40 hours/week 1.5 after 40 hours. Of
16 hours of OT in one pay period only 12 over
40. - 2,000 x 12 24,000 annual
- 24,000/24 1,000 semimonthly gross
- 24,000/ (38 x 52) 12.15 regular rate
- 12.15 x 1.5 18.23 OT rate
- 1,000 (12.15 x 4) (18.23 x 12) 1,267.36
gross - Denominator is always number of hours in full
time year - (may be different between companies)
23Example 4 - Calculating Gross Paycheck
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- FACTS Salary quoted is 1,600/month for 35 hour
work week -paid semimonthly. OT is calculated as
regular hourly pay between 35-40 hours/week 1.5
after 40 hours. Of 16 hours of OT in one pay
period, 6 hours are over 40 hours weekly. - 1,600 x 12 19,200 annual gross
- 19,200/24 800 semimonthly gross
- 19,200/(35 hours x 52 weeks) 10.55 regular
rate - 10.55 x 1.5 15.83 OT rate
- 800 (10.55 x 10) (15.83 x 6) 1,000.48
gross
24Example 5 - Calculating Gross Paycheck
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- FACTS Salary quoted is 2,200/month -
- paid biweekly - 11.5 hours OT in one pay period
- 2,200 x 12 26,400 annual
- 26,400/26 1,015.38 each biweekly pay period
- 26,400/2080 12.69 regular rate
- 12.69 x 1.5 19.04 OT rate
- 1,015.38 (19.04 x 11.5) 1,234.34 gross
25Salaried Employees - Fluctuating Workweek
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- EE and ER may have an agreement that a
fluctuating schedule on a fixed salary is
acceptable - Overtime is calculated by dividing normal salary
by total hours worked gives different pay rate
each week - Then an extra .5 rate is paid for all hours
worked over 40 - or
- Can divide fixed salary by 40 hours same rate
each week - Then an extra .5 rate is paid for all hours
worked over 40 - Alternative BELO Plan
- Appropriate for very irregular work schedule
- Deductions cannot be made for non-disciplinary
absences - Guaranteed compensation cannot be for more than
60 hours - Calculate salary as wage rate multiplied by
maximum number of hours and then add 50 for
overtime
26Piece Rate
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- FLSA requires piecework earners to get paid for
nonproductive time - Must equal minimum wage with OT calculated one of
two ways - Note two methods dont give same results!!
- Method A
- Units produced x unit piece rate regular
earnings - Regular earnings/total hours hourly rate
- Hourly rate x 1/2 OT premium
- Regular earnings (OT premium x OT hours)
gross pay - or
- Method B
- (Units produced in 40 hours x piece rate)
- (Units produced in OT) x (1.5 x piece rate)
27Example 1 - Calculating Piece Rate Gross Pay
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- FACTS 4,812 units inspected in a 47.25 hour week
(600 of those units produced in extra hours).
Employee is paid .12 per unit. Calculate gross
using both methods. - Method A
- (4,812 x .12) 577.44 regular piece rate
earnings - 577.44/47.25 12.22 hourly rate
- 12.22 x .5 6.11 OT premium
- 577.44 (6.11 x 7.25 hrs.) 621.74 gross
- Method B
- (4,212 x .12) 600 x (.12)(1.5) 613.44
gross
28Example 2 - Calculating Piece Rate Gross Pay
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- FACTS Inspection rate .08/unit. An EE
inspected 6897 units in 43.5 hours. She inspected
423 of these in overtime. Calculate using both
methods. - Method A
- (6897 units x .08) 551.76 regular piece rate
earnings - 551.76/43.5 hours 12.68 hourly rate
- 12.68 x .5 6.34 OT premium
- 551.76 (6.34 x 3.5) 573.95 gross
- Method B
- (6474 x .08) (423 x .08 X 1.5) 568.68 gross
29Special Incentive Plans
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- Special incentive plans are modifications of
piece-rate plans - Used to entice workers to produce more
- Computation of payroll is based on differing
rates for differing quantities of production - Example
- .18/unit for units inspected up to 2000
units/week - .24/unit for units inspected between 2001-3500
units/week - .36/unit for units inspected over 3500 units/week
30Commissions
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- Commission can be used in many combinations
- With base salary or stand alone
- As long as minimum wage provisions are met
- Exception are outside salespeople who are exempt
from FLSA - FACTS Sam sold 40,000 of product. His quota is
31,500. He gets 2 in excess of quota. His
annual base salary is 30,000. He gets paid
biweekly - 30,000/26 1,153.85 base earnings
- (40,000 - 31,500) x .02 170 commission
- 1,153.85 170.00 1323.85 gross
31Bonuses and Overtime
- Bonuses that are part of employees wage rates
must be included for period covered by bonus - Those known in advance or set up as incentives
must be added to wages for week - Then divided by total hours work to get regular
pay - OT calculated based upon this rate
32Profit-Sharing Plans
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- Profit Sharing Plans
- EE shares in corporate profits receives his/her
share in the form of - Cash payment
- Profits paid into retirement or savings account
- Profits distributed as stock
- These payments must meet standards established by
Department of Labor
33Violations Remedies
- Wage and Hour Division oversees employees
complaints of minimum wage or OT violations - Statute of limitation is two years
- However, if violation was willful
- Statute is three years
- Liquidated damages can be assessed equal to
back pay and OT awards