THE 2007 WritersUA Salary Survey
Contractors and Part-Timers

ExperienceGenderLocationTrainingManagementOrganization SizeSatisfactionContractors/Part-TimersCanada and OthersSurvey Home

The data values for those identifying themselves as contractors or part-time workers are significantly different than from the broader population. So we separated that data from the main set.

Contractors

Of 803 total respondents, 62 indicated that they work as either an independent contractor or through an agency. We were only able to create reliable averages for the group of 51 U.S. contractors.

Average income is not a very descriptive statistic for this group because (1) many contractors are paid for every hour they work, and (2) a number of contractors work less than full-time. We converted reported income to an average hourly wage using the average number of weekly work hours submitted by the respondents. We assumed 50 weeks of work per year.

This pegs the average hourly wage at $42.02, an increase from last year's average of $38.95. The hourly wage rates range from a high of $75 to a minimum of $19. Thirty percent of the respondents earn between $40 and $50 per hour.

On average, contractors receive an hourly wage rate that is 23% higher than their salaried counterparts average of $34.07. This gap has increased from 17% in 2006. However, it is still below the 25% difference that existed in the 2003 survey. The size of the gap is important to contractors as very few of them receive non-monetary benefits, bonuses, or long-term contracts. These workers are expected to make up for the lack of this security through the overall higher wage rates that they receive. In addition, small business taxes cost many contractors 30 to 40% of their earnings. Coupled with the lack of insurance, vacation, and profit-sharing benefits, the reason people choose to work on contract often has more to do with quality of life issues than with compensation.

Part-Timers

We received responses from 40 people who indicated they work fewer than 35 hours per week. We separated these responses from the rest of the data.

up

 

Copyright © WinWriters. All Rights Reserved.
jjw at writersua.com
Last modified on