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Published byHomer Kennedy Modified over 8 years ago
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Unit 2 - Finance Salaries and Piecewise Earnings
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Salary When you get paid by a salary, you get paid the same amount on each pay check (doesn’t depend on how much work you do). Can have weekly, bi-weekly (every 2 weeks), monthly and annual (yearly) salaries Tends to be for jobs that require you to have special training after high school
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Salary Very predictable how much you will earn (nice for budgeting!) Doesn’t reward you for working extra hard
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Key Facts There are 12 months in a year There are 52 weeks in a year You can’t assume that there are 4 weeks in a month (4 weeks x 12 months = 48 weeks in a year… this loses 4 whole weeks!)
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Calculating Salary Annual Monthly Weekly Can’t convert directly!
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Example Dennis earns $2 800 a month. How much does he earn per week? $2 800 x 12 = $33 600 / year $33 600 / 52 = $646.15 Make sure you round properly (don’t cut off cents!)
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Biweekly Biweekly salaries mean getting paid every two weeks. 52 weeks per year means 26 biweekly pays –Multiply weekly salary by 2 –Divide annual salary by 26
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Example Dennis earns $2 800 a month. How much does he earn biweekly? $2 800 x 12 = $33 600 / year $33 600 / 26 = $1 292.31 biweekly
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Piecewise Earnings Getting paid piecewise means that you get paid per piece or unit of work you do Ex – get paid for every chair you make or every basket of berries you pick
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Piecewise Rewards hard work (the more you work, the more you earn) Less predictable income (something could go wrong that you can’t control and you’ll earn less)
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Example Clara works part-time as a seamstress. She gets paid $5 for every pair of pants she hems. Last weekend, she hemmed 17 pairs of pants. How much did she earn? 17 x $5 = $85 earned
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