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My boss wants us to change to monthly salary.For the conversion he multiplies our weekly salary by 52 and then divides by 12 to give a monthly amount.
we say that this is wrong as there are 365� days on average in a year including the leap years. His calculation assumes 364 day per year.Can we insist he uses the correct figures ??
Surely we are all losing idays pay per year??
Is he breaking our contract asthis originally clearly stated that we were paid weekly??
No best answer has yet been selected by georgeg. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well I suppose he should multiply by 52.17 and divide by 12 but I do think you're splitting hairs.
I doubt there is any way to "insist", it is effecively a pay cut but he can probably do that.
You are losing 1 days pay, yes.
The contract also probably says that he can change it as and when.
Why don't you negotiate a 0.00327% rise!
You shouldn't loose any money, as the number of weeks in a year is not an exact figure. The day you appear to be loosing dosent exist as the day/date changes by one day every year.
ie one week (Mon/Fri) pay will run over into a new year, and you will be paid partly in one year and partly in the next.
Your annual salary is the same whether he divides it by 52 or 12 so multiplying your weekly figure by 52 to get an annual amount then dividing it by 12 is fair.
You could try arguing the point about the extra day in the leap year but don't hold your breath.
It may be esier to explain with an example.
Imagine a couple of folk, Andrew paid weekly and Brenda paid monthly. Andrew gets �100 a week and Brenda gets �433. 33 each month.
If February had started on a Monday this year, Andrew would get �400 at the end of the month but Brenda will get �433.33 (�33.33 MORE) because she gets the same amount each month.
Over the 52 weeks though, Andrew gets 52 x �100 or �5200 and Brenda gets 12 x �433.33 which is �5200.
So you see, no-one loses out changing from weekly to monthly........
For a person to qualify for Statutory Sick Pay (SSP) a person has to earn above a certain weekly rate and fto work out the weekly rate for folk paid monthly, the Inland Revenue multiplies the monthly rate by 12 and divides by 52 so they assume a year is 52 weeks.
If you were paid on a daily basis you may have a case but you aren't .
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