NGA Human Resources has released its 2017 Global Payroll Complexity Index (GPCI) - a business intelligence report identifying the top payroll process and compliance threats by country and region.
From a survey of African payroll experts and professionals, results showed that:
- 71% highlight technical and HR updates as challenges, despite low numbers of payroll runs and updates - likely the result of maturing legislation and reporting requirements
- 86% pay employees in four or more countries in Africa and 43% do this in eight or more - resulting in highest number of languages to consider
- Retro-calculations are simple and least frequent of all regions
- 57% have payroll reporting and analytics high on change agenda
- 38% plan to expand employee operations beyond African continent
Mary Holland of the Global Payroll Management Institute (GPMI) said, “The results of the Global Payroll Complexity Index confirm that multinational organisations face a myriad of demands such as managing employee data, employment and taxation compliance, data storage and privacy, salary and benefit calculations, and a wide range of work rules, and time-off benefits.
“Many of these are mandated by statutory country laws, work councils, and collective bargaining agreements. Organisations are challenged with managing risk exposure, increased government audits, standardising processes, and steering governmental changes while ensuring the integrity of their company brands,” continued Holland.
Anne Clifford, senior director, Global Payroll Operations at NGA Human Resources, explained, “Zero tolerance on payroll non-compliance and the competitive emergence of new business economies means, without a doubt, that businesses must have robust payroll systems and processes in place.”
“In the countries where the 2017 Global Payroll Complexity Index reports a fall in complexity – notably the US and Canada - this is because the high-risk, high-admin payroll processes have been outsourced or automated to reduce the risk of fines and reputation damage,” concluded Clifford.
Other notable observations of the 2017 Global Payroll Complexity Index
Managing employee data: All organisations must provide payroll related information to local government departments to determine the social security and/or tax contribution of each citizen. Globally, companies must include an average of 16 data items per employee to the government in the mandated reports and declarations.
Consistent with the 2014 study, Western Europe still requires the highest number of employee data items for a net salary to be correctly calculated. Germany, France, Italy and Spain are most complex, requiring an average of 17 items. This highlights the need for highly accurate HR source data.
Managing payroll data: An average of 14 employee data items affect a net salary – little change to 2014. Italy, France and Poland top the parameter ranking for complexity, contrasting sharply with Canada and Switzerland at the bottom. Benefits and attendance have replaced tax and social security as the biggest contributors to payroll complexity.
Payroll calculation process: The majority of employers run payroll once or twice a month. Globally, North America and Oceania run the most payrolls per month, while South America and Asia run the least. In Europe, France and Italy report the most payroll runs each month.
Government reporting and declarations: On average, 16 data items per employee must be reported; a decrease from 20 in 2014. In South America and Europe the number is notably higher at 35; Italy, the Netherlands and France require the most.
Geographical influences: Each country and business type has its own cultural, regulatory factors and union agreements that affect payroll. In 60% of countries, employee-specific contracts influence payroll. Additionally, multi-level rules, legislation and agreements are continually adapted to comply with economic factors and changing working practices.
Language complexity: In 60% of countries surveyed, more than one language is spoken, adding the need for multilingual payroll. Organisations in South America are most affected. Those in Australia and New Zealand are the least affected.
Country / Regional Spotlight
Europe
- Europe is the most complex payroll region in the world
- Seven out of the top 10 most complex countries are in Europe
- France, Italy & Belgium are most complex; Luxemburg the least
- Number of data fields, payroll runs, and technical and legal updates required for compliance is highest in Europe; 37% of respondents say that updates “keep them awake at night”
- Complexity has increased since 2014 where other regions have seen simplification
North America
- US complexity sits at 5.78 out of 10; one point lower than in 2014 – likely the result of high complexity processes being outsourced, not a reduction in complexity
- The country is still in the top 40% for complexity. Only Brazil is higher in the Americas at 11th place
- Complexity remains ‘high’ and ‘very high’ for US and Canadian payroll teams when it comes to ‘Managing Payroll Data’ and the ’Payroll Calculation Process’
- 67% highlight technical, HR and payroll updates as the greatest complexity challenge
- 28% of enterprise organisations in North America plan to move employees into new regions (28% to UK, 24% Asia Pacific, 20% South America)
- Zero tolerance for non-compliance is fast becoming a secondary business tax
Asia
- Region with the lowest payroll complexity. Only Russia is in top 20
- Highest rating for languages and number of people being paid in non-local currency
- Malaysia has least complex payroll score according to respondents
- Philippines has least complex employee data ranking
- Region has lowest number of payroll runs; India and Philippines is down since 2014
South America
- Higher than average complexity, with Brazil just outside top 10
- No fixed tax change calendar makes it impossible to standardise concurrent runs
- 37% say regulatory reporting and data analytics are a challenge
- 30% highlight the challenge of managing technical and HR updates
- Lowest number of data items required, and the fewest payroll runs
- However, retro-calculations are particularly high
Review the study at my.ngahr.com/payrollcomplexity-2017/