Payroll Calculation Information

When you create an element, the application generates the rules and definitions required to calculate an earnings or deduction amount. For all types of elements, these rules and definitions include elements, formulas, and processing rules.

This topic explains the payroll calculation information rules and definitions generated for certain classifications and categories of user-defined elements, such as involuntary deductions, absence information, and time card entries.

These rules and definitions exist within the following components:

  • Elements

  • Payroll components

  • Wage basis rules

  • Calculation factors

  • Calculation value definitions

  • Calculation components

All predefined tax and social insurance elements also include payroll calculation information rules and definitions.

Note: Elements that use calculation information definitions don't capture the values required for the calculation on element input values.

Task Summary

This table summarizes the purpose of each type of calculation information and the task you can use to view or edit it.

Calculation Information

Description

Task

Elements

Elements specify how and when an earnings or deduction should be processed. When you create an element, several related elements are typically created with the same name prefix. You can view the related elements and other generated items on the Element Summary page, including:

  • Status processing rule - specifies the formula that processes the element entries

  • Input values - values that can be entered for, or returned from, the calculation

After creating an element:

  • You must add eligibility rules

  • You may want to add:

    • Input values

    • Status processing rules

    • Frequency rules

    • Balance feeds

Use the Elements task to create elements and to view the generated elements and related items.

Payroll components

A payroll component is a group of rates and rules that the payroll run uses to calculate values for earnings and deductions.

When you create elements in certain classifications and categories, such as involuntary deductions, the element template creates a payroll component with the same name.

You can manage payroll components using predefined component groups, such as federal tax, employment insurance, taxes, retirement plans, involuntary deductions, and benefits.

Payroll Calculation Information task to view payroll components and their associated rules.

Wage basis rules

Wage basis rules determine the earnings that contribute to a deductible amount or, for exemptions, the elements that reduce the amount subject to deduction.

For example, wage basis rules might define which secondary classifications of standard and supplemental earnings are subject to a particular tax.

Rules may vary based on reference criteria such as the province of employment.

Use the Component Group Rules task to define the rules and references.

Use the Calculation Cards task to enter reference values for workers.

Calculation value definitions

Calculation value definitions store calculation rates and rules, which may vary based on other criteria.

The calculation value definition controls which calculation values are enterable on a calculation card.

Use the Calculate Value Definitions task to:

  • View predefined definitions and the definitions that element templates create.

  • Update the annual maximum assessable wages are delivered for each province for processing Workers' Compensation.

Note: You can edit definitions that element templates create, such as adding default calculation values.

Calculation components

Calculation components are individual calculations captured on a calculation card. When an element template creates a payroll component, it also creates calculation components that you can enter on personal calculation cards to enter specific details for the person.

Use the Calculation Cards task to enter calculation components for a person.

Calculation factors

Calculation factors indicate which calculation value definition to use when calculating the amount.

For example, a calculation factor might identify which set of tax rates to use based on the tax code of the employee.

If tax rates vary based on a factor such as a person's filing status, then filing status is defined as a calculation factor reference. Thus, an element may have multiple calculation factors, one for each unique set of rules and references values.

Use the Elements, Element Overview task to access calculation factors.

Use the Payroll Calculation Information task to create new calculation factors. Normally, you don't need to create new factors, but if you do, you must also edit the element's payroll formula to use the new calculation factors.

Calculation types

A calculation type describes a way of calculating a value. For example, calculating a value as a Flat Amount or by applying a Rate to a value.

There's a predefined set of Calculation Types.

Use the Calculation Value Definitions task to view calculation types.

Calculation steps

A Calculation Step is a name or label that denotes part of a payroll calculation.

For example, a time calculation can consist of the following parts:

  • Calculate Hours worked

  • Calculate hourly rate

A regional tax calculation can consist of the following parts:

  • Calculate Exemptions

  • Calculate Allowances

  • Calculate Tax

Each one of these is a calculation step in a fast formula.

Use the Payroll Calculation Information task.

Calculation methods

Predefined calculation methods are a way of performing a payroll calculation.

For example, a tax could be calculated using a cumulative year-to-date payroll balance or a periodic payroll value.

Use the Payroll Calculation Information task.

Calculation factors

Calculation factors create an association between an element, calculation step, and a calculation value definition.

Calculation factors indicate which calculation value definition to use when calculating the amount.

Calculation factors can support complex calculations such as tax rates. For example, if a tax rate varies based on a factor such as a person's filing status the filing status can be defined as a calculation factor reference thus, an element may have multiple calculation factors, one for each unique set of rules and references values.

Use the Elements, Element Overview task.