3-4 minute
Pay variance is the difference between an employee's base pay and the pay they are actually paid at the end of a pay period. It can also refer to the difference between an employee's base pay and their total compensation. Total compensation/actual pay is usually higher than the negotiated amount due to company bonuses and overtime pay.
Wage fluctuations are usually caused by unexpected or uneven demand – employers have to ask their employees to work extra hours to compensate for that demand. This can result in:
Let's say you run a package fulfillment center. One of your employees who assembles your packages (we'll call him Kyle) was hired to work 40 hours per week. Kyle is scheduled for five days at a rate of $15 per hour. This means that, without pay variance, you pay Kyle $600 per week.
Now, let's say you've received an unusually large order that needs to be fulfilled on the day Kyle is off work. Unfortunately, some of your other employees scheduled to work that day are sick, so Kyle has to cover for them.
Kyle works a full eight-hour shift to complete this order, which means he is eligible for eight hours of overtime:
$15 (Kyle's salary) x 1.5 (overtime calculation) = $22.50 (Kyle's overtime wage rate)
$22.5 x 8 (number of overtime hours) = $180 (Kyle's overtime compensation)
$180 + $600 (Kyle's usual salary) = $780
In this example, your employee's pay variance is $180.
Salary fluctuations are a product of unpredictable variables that can prevent employers from accurately predicting pay during a pay period. Salary fluctuations can make budgeting difficult.
Although you should always pay employees the wages they deserve, there are some things employers can do to better manage their pay variances:
You will most likely be affected by pay variance if your company does any of the following:
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