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They look for reasons to eliminate job applicants from consideration.

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Q: How do employers decrease the amount of work they must do to find a potential employee?
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How do employers decrease the amount of work they must do to find potential employee?

They look for reasons to eliminate job applicants from consideration.


How do employers decrease the amount of work they must do to find a potential?

They look for reasons to eliminate job applicants from consideration.


How do employers decreases the amount of work they must do to find a potential employee?

They look for reasons to eliminate job applicants from consideration.


Which of the following is a description of withholding?

it is the amount employers subtract from an employee's check each pay period.


What is the provident fund amount that employers should contribute?

12% of the basic salary paid out to the employee


Does the healthcare law require employers to include in the W-2 form of each employee the aggregate cost of applicable employer sponsored group health coverage that is excludable from the employee's g?

Yes if the employer is claiming the credit the amount of the medical insurance premium that the employer is paying on behalf of the employee will be included on the W-2 form to inform the employee of the amount that the employer is paying for the employee.


Employers use which form to compute the amount of federal income tax to withhold from you check?

They use the Form W-4 that the employee fills out and gives them and then they look up the amount to be withheld in Publication 15 (a.k.a. Circular E).


What is the amount of decrease if 92 is reduced by 35 percent?

The amount of decrease is 32.2.


What is the formula to find the Percentage of decrease?

percentage of decrease = amount of decrease divided b the original amount and then multiply.


Can employers make contributions to roth IRA?

Yes and no, if an employer contributes to your Roth IRA directly the employer must report it as income to you. Since it is income they must also report it to uncle sam as taxable income and the employer will have to pay payroll taxes on the contribution. They can not pay into a Roth as the employer, so that answer is NO. Most employers will not want to deal with the potential IRS reporting nightmare this can have. That being said, the're companies that offer PDP, payroll deduction plans. These plans are employee funded through the employees paycheck. The funds can be used to fund any type of account, i.e Roth, IRA, 529 and so on. The Employer then sends one check monthly to the company of choice based on the amount each employee has withheld from thier individual pay checks, hence payroll deduction. If the employer is looking to offer this as a benefit to it's employee or key employee the employer would increase the employee's pay to match the amount the employer wishes to contribute to the employee. But ultimately it looks like the employee is making the contributions.


What do you multiply by to decrease an amount by 30 percent?

To decrease an amount 30 percent, multiply that amount by 0.7


What is the percent decrease from 220 to 33?

Percent Decrease = (Original Amount - New Amount)/(Original Amount) * 100% The percent decrease from 220 to 33 is 85%