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Edited version of your written advice

Authorisation Number: 1051291094188

Ruling

Subject: Ordinary time earnings

Question

What are the ordinary hours of work for the casual employees of the employer for the purposes of subsection 6(1) of the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 (SGAA)?

Advice

The ordinary hours of work are a maximum of 20 hours per week including all times worked up to 8.00pm on Monday to Saturday

The arrangement commences on:

2015

Relevant facts and circumstances

Your advisor wrote to us asking for administratively binding advice of your superannuation guarantee obligations in regards to your casual employees.

You engage casual employees under an enterprise agreement (the Agreement).

Relevant legislative provisions

Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 subsection 6(1)

Reasons for decision

From 1 July 2008, all employers must use OTE as the earnings base to calculate the minimum super guarantee contributions required for your employees.

The phrase ‘ordinary time earnings’ is defined in subsection 6(1) of the SGAA as follows:

In broad terms (and subject to some exceptions), OTE of an employee means earnings in respect of ordinary hours of work. Payments for work performed outside the ordinary hours of work, such as overtime payments, are not OTE.

OTE is usually the amount an employee earns for their ordinary hours of work. It includes commissions, shift-loadings and some allowances, but does not include overtime payments. Superannuation Guarantee Ruling SGR 2009/2 Superannuation guarantee: meaning of the terms 'ordinary time earnings' and 'salary or wages' (SGR 2009/2) provides further guidance on what constitutes OTE.

The expression ‘earnings in respect of ordinary hours of work’ or any of the terms in that expression are not defined in the SGAA. The Commissioner’s view on the meaning of these phrases is expressed in the following paragraphs of SGR 2009/2 as follows:

Paragraphs 41 of SGR 2009/2 outline that overtime earnings are specifically in excluded in definition of OTE:

Paragraphs 20 to 22 and paragraphs and 220 to 222 of SGR 2009/2 outline earnings which are specifically included in definition of OTE:

Examples 5 and 6 in SGR 2009/2 provide scenarios involving shift allowances and overtime rates due to a ‘bandwidth’ clause.

Salary or wages

OTE

Salary or wages

OTE

Application to your circumstances:

In your case the Agreement stipulates what the ordinary hours are for your employees. The Agreement stipulates that ordinary hours are a maximum of 20 hours per week Monday to Saturday. The Agreement states that ordinary hours are worked within a band up until 8:00pm on Monday to Saturday. The Agreement also stipulates that any hours worked over the twenty ordinary hours in a week (i.e. Monday to Saturday) will be remunerated at a higher rate. Hours worked after 8.00pm also paid at the penalty rate.

As per paragraph 13 of SGR 2009/2 the award defines these hours to be outside of employees’ ordinary hours. Furthermore, as per paragraph 14 of the SGR 2009/2, this Agreement draws a genuine distinction between these hours and employees’ ordinary hours by having these hours remunerated at a higher rate. Therefore these hours are overtime hours.

Paragraph 41 of SGR 2009/2 specifically excludes earnings in respect of overtime in OTE.

In conclusion, the ordinary hours of work are a maximum of 20 hours per week, worked up until 8.00pm, Monday to Saturday.


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