Payroll burden, also referred to as labor burden costs, is the total cost to
the employer to pay an employee. This includes the employee’s wages, but it
also covers all the payroll taxes and benefits your business must foot the
bill for.
Employer contributions include mandatory taxes that fund things like social
benefits, healthcare, unemployment and statutory holidays. The costs of
employee benefits like additional paid time off, retirement contributions and
bonuses are also rolled up into payroll burden.
Given these variables, payroll burden costs can vary widely depending on which
countries you are paying employees in.
Why payroll burden matters to your business
Whether you are running a small business or a multinational company, there is
no room for guesswork in finances. It’s hard to be profitable or competitive
without understanding the true costs of doing business.
Understanding your total workforce spend in certain regions is critical to
informing strategic decisions about where your company does business.
Cost of living data and typical wages provide some clues into how much you
might spend to employ people in a specific country. But with such wide
variations in social benefits and statutory pay requirements from one country
to another, it is far more important to understand the true cost of payroll
burden. It not only tells you how much you are spending on payroll expenses,
but it paints a bigger picture of the true cost of labor and operations in
each country.
What the numbers look like in different countries
Looking for a feel on what to expect for payroll burden in a certain locale?
Source: www.oecd.org
In the U.S., this percentage includes the tax burden plus voluntary benefits
(such as healthcare).
If Brazil’s number just made you do a double
take, you aren't alone. But it’s important to remember that a high payroll
burden percentage does not necessarily equate to bigger expenses.
The whole picture includes the cost of living, salary expectations, payroll
burden and your company’s individual approach to voluntary benefits.
For example, China, which has one of the largest and most labor-intensive
markets, has an average payroll burden of 36%. However, the cost of living
and typical salary in China is much lower than in many developed countries.
The average annual salary in China is ¥90,600 ($14,010 USD), while the average
salary in the U.S. is $84,500.
Looking at it this way, a 29.8% payroll burden on an $85K U.S. salary is
actually a much larger expense than 36% on a $14K Chinese salary.
Similarly, the payroll burden in Brazil can be almost three-quarters of the employees’
salary. But the average annual salary in Brazil is 183,846 BRL ($43,983 USD).
These costs also go to cover a number of notable causes. For one, the Brazilian
government is deeply invested in improving the quality of life for the lower
class—a pretty big chunk of change goes to social welfare programs.
At the end of the day, these data points are useful, but it’s important to
consider a country’s average payroll burden in context of these other factors.
Reduce payroll costs and improve profitability
You can use this data to reduce payroll costs—and improve profitability—for
your business. But you’ll need both expertise and a well-oiled payroll system
to forecast, calculate and optimize true payroll burden.
There’s an alternative to managing it all in-house, though.
International payroll partners collect comprehensive payroll data, offering
you actionable information on payroll burden all around the world. Not sure if
your next expansion should be France or India? A centralized payroll provider
can reveal data insights to help your business make the best decisions.
The right international payroll provider also has the expertise and systems to
crunch your business’ specific numbers any time you need them. Find a good
managed payroll partner, and it will be a breeze to run payroll data up the ladder
any time you get a request (no complex spreadsheets required).