Sentences with word «paybill»

Civil Service Paybill reconstructed from PESA and MoD annual reports, corrected for inflation.
However, in PESA 2005, the reported administration paybill fell by about 20 per cent (backdated in PESA 2006 so that the reduction appeared to date from 2001).
The MoD civilian paybill appeared and disappeared mysteriously over the period.
This showed the civil service paybill backdated to 1986.
When we look at the pattern more closely, that increase in administration costs turns out to have come from non-payroll items such as consultancy and IT, while paybill — what it cost to hire civil servants — stayed roughly the same in constant - price terms over the period as a whole.
It increases the risk of cancer, diabetes and heart disease — and it costs our economy # 27 billion a year; that's more than half the entire NHS paybill.
With a total workforce of 1.6 million people, more compulsory redundancies are inevitable as councils bid to cut their # 30 billion annual paybill.
This could be because the pooled paybill may be large enough to trigger a levy payment while the individual pay bills are small enough not to.
With maintained schools the Local Authority is the employer and therefore all maintained schools will have to contribute to the levy presumably at 0.5 % of their own paybill.
To send Donations Via Mpesa: • Select Paybill • Enter Business Number 50766 • Enter your name as it appears on your official Identification Card or Passport in the Account section • Enter the amount you wish to donate • Enter your MPESA PIN • Confirm your Donation
From 1961 to 1985 the civil service paybill was reported annually in the Treasury memoranda.
A footnote in PESA 1996 stated «This covers the pay costs of civil servants and others (including casual staff) covered by running costs plus Ministry of Defence's operating costs regime» and we found that (for those years only) the paybill included the whole of the armed forces pay.
The series were named, «Civil Service Paybill», «Administration Costs Paybill» or just «Paybill» (though those titles meant different things at different times).
In two editions (1996 and 1997) the «paybill» was nearly double that of previous (and subsequent) reports.
The first edition to mention the paybill was Public Expenditure Analyses to 1994 - 95 (Cm 1920 1991 - 92)(PESA 1992).
Thereafter, each successive edition reported the paybill (in the section on central government running costs) for the current and several previous years.
We plotted the paybill figures from all 20 editions of PESA and found several incompatible data sets (Figure 1).
This dramatic fall was not mentioned in the text, but a footnote now described the paybill as covering «the pay costs of civil servants falling within Administration Budgets.»
We have developed a method for removing such reclassifications (Hood and Dixon 2012 Public Administration forthcoming) and were then able to put together a consistent data set for the paybill for fiscal years 1986 - 7 to 2002 - 03 (the green line in Figure 3).
As a result, the Government's Expenditure Plans 1986 (the first of the Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses (PESA)-RRB- did not mention the paybill, but just «running costs».
The one category of civil servants which increased substantially in number and paybill over the past five years was «special advisers,» the political appointees who work closely with ministers (Figure 3).
The Chancellor announced today that an apprenticeship levy, set at a rate of 0.5 % of an employer's paybill will be introduced in April 2017.
But even though the paybill changed little in real terms, no less than one civil servant in three disappeared from the payroll over these three decades (far surpassing Milton Friedman's 1977 proposal for removing one civil servant in six from the public payroll, then mostly dismissed as a far - right fantasy).
From 6 April 2017 where an employer's paybill exceeds # 3 million, they will begin to make payment for the Apprenticeship Levy by paying 0.5 per cent of their paybill amount over to HMRC each tax month along with remittances for PAYE Income Tax and National Insurance Contributions (NICs).
The paybill is made up of the total amount of employee earnings (such as wages / salary, bonus and commission) that are subject to Class 1 National Insurance contributions including all employee earnings below the Lower Earnings Limit and the Secondary Threshold Employees.
It could also be because the levy payment for the largest employer in a pooled payroll could be increased by the inclusion of other employers» paybills in the total paybill.
Whilst employers pay at a rate zero per cent for employees under the age of 21 and apprentices under the age of 25, their pay will still need to be included within the paybill total.
Where a pooled payroll contains only one employer who is liable to make apprenticeship levy payments, the calculation must ensure that only that employer's pay bill is taken into account, ignoring the smaller employers» paybills.
Where a pooled payroll is small enough that 0.5 per cent of the sum of the paybills is less than the full monthly levy allowance (# 1,250), no levy payment will be triggered.
Only employers who have no levy to pay are excluded from this duty, which will only happen if the levy allowance for the tax month exceeds 0.5 per cent of the total value of the paybill that month.
Where an employer had a paybill of less than # 2.8 million in 2016/17 and they predict that their paybill will not exceed # 3 million during the 2016/17 tax year they will not need to engage with the Apprenticeship Levy.
Pay good teachers more Performance - related pay has allowed schools to do this, but an overall 1 per cent cap on rises means uplifts beyond 1 per cent always come at the detriment of other staff's paybill.
Employers with a paybill of more than # 3 million will pay the monthly levy via PAYE.
However it's important to know that different rules apply depending on the size of a business's paybill.
The Apprenticeship Levy, effective from April 6th 2017, requires businesses with a paybill of over # 3 million pa to fork out 0.5 % on apprenticeships for young people.
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