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18:51 Jan 20, 2009 |
English language (monolingual) [PRO] Bus/Financial - Finance (general) / payslip | |||||
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| Selected response from: Taña Dalglish Jamaica Local time: 03:58 | ||||
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Discussion entries: 3 | |
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ni. ers. tp vs ni. ern. tp W/E = week ending Explanation: At least that is on my pay stub in the USA. |
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ni. ers. tp vs ni. ern. tp National Insurance, Employers, Taxable pay vs. .... more Explanation: N.I. = National Insurance ERS = Employer's ** (see link which explains ERS and EES contributions) TP = taxable pay [PDF] How to Understand Your Payslip →File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML 1625.36. N.I EES TO DATE:. G 542.42. N.I ERS TO DATE:. 631.24. NET. PAY ... Amount of National Insurance and Income Tax deducted from this pay ... www.steamingcustard.co.uk/understand-your-payslip.pdf - Similar pages - Pensions - CPAS NoticeboardThe monthly total of employer (Ers) and employee (Ees) pension ... Contracted- out Employees pay 9.4% in National Insurance Contributions (NIC) on earnings ... www.nottingham.ac.uk/finance/noticeboard/Pensions Docs/pens... - 15k - Cached - Similar pages - HTH. -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 1 hr (2009-01-20 20:05:47 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Ers Ni? - MoneySavingExpert.com Forums2 posts Just got my pay slip for this month. It has N.I to date. Then underneath it has ERS ... Searched the Tax/National insurance website still cant work it out. ... forums.moneysavingexpert.com/showthread.html?p=11276185 - 75k - Cached - Similar pages - More results from forums.moneysavingexpert.com » House Price Crash forum > National Insurance – What Is It For?14 posts - Last post: 20 May 2006 Can someone please explain to me why I pay National Insurance? Looking in my wage slip this month I noticed that my NI contribution was £109 ... www.housepricecrash.co.uk/forum/lofiversion/index.php/t3030... - 13k - Cached - Similar pages - -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 1 hr (2009-01-20 20:39:06 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Jolo: I am not sure what you mean by 'TP probably does not mean National Insurance?' I didn't say it did. Perhaps the links I provided would shed more light on the issue. According to the links TP could be taxable pay. It can also be Total pay in keeping with your context. HTH! -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 2 hrs (2009-01-20 20:59:31 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- NI could also be Net Income. You will need to adapt to your text, where necessary. -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 3 hrs (2009-01-20 21:54:36 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Jolo: I noted your subsequent posting: 'I was also thinking about Net Income in the other place. Taxyear Balances: Gross Pay: 8449.96; N.I. ER. :529.84; N.I. EARNS: 8424.00' I believe N.I. EARNS 8,424.00 would relate to Net Income Earnings, but it would hardly be likely that N.I. ER: 529.84 would be the same. Here I believe it may be National Insurance Employer (Employer's Contribution): 529.84. Does this make sense? -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 3 hrs (2009-01-20 21:57:31 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- Jolo: Now you have me doubting. Let us wait for other peers to provide comments, shall we? -------------------------------------------------- Note added at 3 hrs (2009-01-20 22:26:46 GMT) -------------------------------------------------- There is also another way of looking at this: N.I. ER. :529.84; N.I. EARNS: 8424.00. N.I.ER 529.84 may well be Net Income Earned, meaning for a period, i.e. two week period, or a monthly period, while NI EARNS. would be earned to date. Hope all these comments help. |
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