How Long It Takes the Largest Companies in America to Make One Employee's Average Annual Salary - eviltoast
  • Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 个月前

    I’m having a hard time with the realities of this. How much time should a corporation take to earn the salary of the average employee? What percent of a company’s yearly profits would be appropriate to be spent on salaries? Many of the companies are exceeding 1/12. Is that enough? If not, what is?

    I know I’ll probably be on the wrong side of things (again), but I didn’t find this graphic stirring. Is there a number out there that people find acceptable?

    • blackbrook@mander.xyz
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      10 个月前

      Profits aren’t spent on salaries. Salaries one of the things deducted from revenue to determine profits.

      • Hillock@kbin.social
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        10 个月前

        Even if we compare it to profits the time frame just switch to minutes. Walmart made a net profit after taxes of 14 billion. That translates to 26k per minute.

      • Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        10 个月前

        Shouldn’t the discussion revolve solely around SPENDABLE income? Am I misunderstanding something? I’m sure I am.

        • Efwis@lemmy.zip
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          10 个月前

          No, salaries are based a pre-tax basis. In other words you’re told you’ll make $120,000 per year, that amount is before taxes.

          • betz24@lemmynsfw.com
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            10 个月前

            But companies also pay taxes before even paying you. So they’ll pay 140k to pay you 120k which you’ll earn 100k (along those lines)

            • Kaefor@lemmy.ca
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              10 个月前

              They pay tax after paying you.

              Payroll is an expense that gets deducted from revenue before calculating taxes.

              They pay employer contributions/insurance/deductions but you pay the tax on it. It’s to avoid double taxing that money (corp pays tax and you pay tax).

              Edit for replies: yes, they pay payroll tax but that is based on payroll, and is a percentage of payroll. The other replies were referring to bottom line tax and revenue/profit. Maybe I should have been clearer but I was trying to keep it easy and not muddy the waters.

              • betz24@lemmynsfw.com
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                10 个月前

                I have run payroll myself. When you run payroll, a company pays taxes to the government. Every paycheck. There are taxes the company is liable for and not employees.

        • MxM111@kbin.social
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          10 个月前

          I thing comparison to the employee salary makes no sense whatsoever. Different businesses have different expenditure structures depending on various things, like the type of business their are doing. In some companies, salaries might be dominating expense, in some others barely noticeable. Says nothing about how “fair” the business is.

          • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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            10 个月前

            And two companies with the same proportional structure, but of different number of employees, will have different numbers in this representation.

    • paholg@lemm.ee
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      10 个月前

      Ooooooh, companies. I initially misread it as CEOs, and the numbers did not seem right. Though that would be a more interesting metric.