Full-time Equivalent (FTE)
(2015-11-18 22:00:59)
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Full-time Equivalent (FTE) is a unit equivalent of a full-time employee’s workload. It is the ratio of the total number of paid hours by the number of working hours in a period. It is used to measure employees regardless of the difference in total working hours. At present, seasonal and temporary workers are excluded from total FTE calculations.
- Multiply the number of workers by 40 (8 hours a day x 5 days a
week).
- Example: 6 full time workers: 6 x 40 = 240 hours
- Multiply the result by 52 (weeks in a year).
- Example: 240 x 52 = 12,480 full-time hours
- Multiply the total weekly hours by the number of weeks each
part-time employee has worked. Example:
- 1 Part-time Employee worked 15 hours every week for 30 weeks: 1 x 15 x 30 = 450 hours
- 2 Part-time Employees worked 20 hours for 40 weeks each: 2 x 20 x 40 = 1600 hours
- Add the results together to obtain their total hours.
- Example: 450 + 1600 = 2,050 part-time hours
- Example: 12,480 (full-time) + 1600 (part-time) = 14,080 total hours
- Divide the total hours by 2,080 (8 hours a day x 5 days a week
x 52 weeks a year) to calculate yearly FTE.
- Example: 14,080 total hours ÷2080 = 6.769 FTEs
- Divide the total hours by 173.33 to find the FTE per month.
- Example: 4,000 hours for February ÷173.33 = 23.07 FTEs
- Divide the total hours by 8 to obtain FTE per day.
- Example: 80 daily hours ÷ 8 = 10 FTEs
FTEs do not indicate the number of employees. The value of an FTE is constant over time, except when the company modifies its regular staffing pattern.
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Question: What is an FTE? How Do I Calculate Employee FTEs?
The term FTE or Full-time Equivalent is used in many contexts, but in particular in the Health Care Reform Law. In this context, an FTE is used to determine the number of employees, both full-time and part-time, for purposes of determining eligibility for employer tax credits. A full-time employee is considered to work 2080 hours a year (52 weeks times 40 hours per week).
Part-time employee hours are considered as a fraction of 2080 and are added together to get a total number of full-time equivalents.
Answer:
How to calculate Full-time Equivalents (FTEs):
The number of an employer’s FTEs is determined by
dividing:
- The total hours for which you (the employer) pay wages to all
employees during the year, up to 2080 per employee, by
- 2,080. The result, if not a whole number, is then rounded to the next lowest whole number. So, 17.80 employees would be 17 FTEs.
Seasonal workers are disregarded in determining FTEs and average annual wages unless the seasonal worker works more than 120 days during the tax year.
The IRS provides this example:
For the 2010 tax year, an employer pays 5 employees wages for 2,080
hours each, 3 employees wages for 1,040 hours each, and 1 employee
wages for 2,300 hours.
The employer’s FTEs would be calculated as follows:
- Total hours not exceeding 2,080 per employee is the sum
of:
a. 10,400 hours for the 5 employees paid for 2,080 hours each (5 x 2,080)
b. 3,120 hours for the 3 employees paid for 1,040 hours each (3 x 1,040)
c. 2,080 hours for the 1 employee paid for 2,300 hours (lesser of 2,300 and 2,080)
These add up to 15,600 hours
- FTEs: 7 (15,600 divided by 2,080 = 7.5, rounded to the next lowest whole number)
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Full-time equivalent
Full-time equivalent (FTE) or whole time equivalent (WTE) is a unit that indicates the workload of an employed person (or student) in a way that makes workloads or class loads comparable[1] across various contexts.
U.S. Federal Government
In the U.S. Federal Government, FTE is defined by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) as the number of total hours worked divided by the maximum number of compensable hours in a full-time schedule as defined by law.[3] For example, if the normal schedule for a quarter is defined as 411.25 hours ( [35 hours per week * (52 weeks per year – 5 weeks regulatory vacation)] / 4), then someone working 100 hours during that quarter represents 100/411.25 = 0.24 FTE. Two employees working in total 400 hours during that same quarterly period represent 0.97 FTE.
The U.S. Office of Management and Budget, or OMB, the President's budget office, will often place upper limits on the total number of FTE that a given agency may utilize each year. In the past, if agencies were given a ceiling on the actual number of employed workers, which was reported on a given day of the year, the agency could employ more than this number for much of the year. Then, as the reporting deadline approached, employees could be let go to reduce the total number to the authorized ceiling on the reporting date. Providing agencies with an FTE ceiling, which is calculated based on the total number of hours worked by all employees throughout the year, irrespective of the total numbers employed at any point in time, prevents agencies from using such a strategy.
Although the generally accepted human-resources meaning for the "E" in FTE is "equivalent", the term is often overloaded in colloquial usage to indicate a "direct, as opposed to contract, full-time employee".[this quote needs a citation]
The term WYE is often used instead of FTE when describing the contractor work. WYE stands for work year equivalent.
In education
Full-time equivalent students is one of the key metrics for measuring enrollment in colleges and universities. The measure is often annualized to cover the average annual full-time equivalent students and is designated by the acronym AAFTE.
Academics can increase contribution by adopting a number of strategies: (a) increase class size; (b) teach new classes; (c) supervise more projects; (d) supervise more researchers. The latter strategy has the advantage of contributing to another key metric in Universities – creating new knowledge and in particular publishing papers in highly ranked academic journals. It's also linked to another key metric – research funding that is often required to attract researchers.
Example
A professor teaches two undergraduate courses, supervises two undergraduate projects and supervises four researchers by thesis only (i.e. researchers do not take any courses). Each undergraduate course is worth 1/10 of all credits for the undergraduate programme (i.e. 0.1 FTE). An undergraduate project is worth 2/10ths of all credits for the undergraduate programme (i.e. 0.2 FTE). A research thesis is worth all of the credits for the graduate programme (i.e. 1 FTE). The professor's contribution is 29.4 FTEs:
Contribution | FTEs allocated | Class size | Total FTEs |
---|---|---|---|
Course 1 | 0.1 | 100 | 10 |
Course 2 | 0.1 | 150 | 15 |
U/G Projects | 0.2 | 2 | 0.4 |
Research thesis | 1 | 4 | 4 |
Totals | – | 256 | 29.4 |
To encourage more research some universities offer 2 FTEs or even 3 FTEs for each full-time researcher.
In Australia, the equivalent to FTE for students is EFTSU (Equivalent Full-Time Student Unit).