User:Greenbreen/Sandbox
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- The workweek is the country's legal workweek in hours, above which is considered overtime and is often paid premium pay. See notes for variations on this definition. The main source for workweek data is: the Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2017 by the US Department of State Archived 2018-05-21 at the Wayback Machine.
- The percentage was calculated by dividing the minimum wage (PPP) by the GDP per capita (PPP) from 2018 – obtained from the World Bank's GDP per capita, PPP (current international $), World Development Indicators database Archived 2019-06-22 at the Wayback Machine.
- Annual wages were calculated by multiplying monthly wages by 12, weekly wages by 52, daily wages by 5x52 and hourly wages by Wx52, where W is the legal maximum (or the practical, if lower) workweek length in hours. A US$ conversion rate from 2017 – obtained from the World Bank's Official exchange rate (LCU per US$, period average), World Development Indicators database Archived 2017-07-25 at the Wayback Machine – was used to convert the annual wage from national currency to US dollars. The template To US$ was used to convert the annual wage from national currency to US dollars.
- Annual wages were calculated by multiplying monthly wages by 12, weekly wages by 52, daily wages by 5x52 and hourly wages by Wx52, where W is the legal maximum (or the practical, if lower) workweek length in hours. A purchasing power parity (PPP) conversion rate from 2016 – obtained from the World Bank's PPP conversion factor, private consumption (LCU per international $), World Development Indicators database Archived 2017-07-08 at the Wayback Machine – was used to convert the annual wage from national currency to international dollars. The template International dollars was used to convert the annual wage from national currency to international dollars.
- Hourly wages were calculated by dividing the annual minimum wage (US$) rate by 52 weeks and then by the length of the standard hour workweek.
- Hourly wages were calculated by dividing the annual minimum wage (PPP) by 52 weeks and then by the length of the standard workweek.