Ready For Your Payroll Software Update? 105
SEWilco writes "A federal payroll tax reduction for two months is being pushed by the President. Paying less money to the government seems good, but if the law is changed it will change the payroll taxes in January and February. Many of us can well imagine what that will do to the many payroll systems which are already programmed with the 2012 tax rates."
Srsly? (Score:4, Informative)
They'll load a different tax rate table. I'm sure it's modular enough they can just change a table (or two, or three) and be done.
Seems easy to me. But then I write software for a living, so what would I know.
Change Management PITA (Score:4, Informative)
As others have said, updating the rates in the tax tables is trivial. It actually takes us more time to go through change management process and get no less than 4 levels of approval to make the changes in the production payroll system.
Re:On a separate note... (Score:4, Informative)
Actually they start at 0. And the "stupid reason" is simply because you don't seem to write informative, interesting or insightful posts, and funny doesn't give you karma.
Re:For two months? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Srsly? (Score:4, Informative)
This is exactly it. And almost every shop that processes payroll subscribes to a service that updates the tax tables for you as the laws change. www.bsi.com is one.
I'm sure they have the tax tables written up either way the vote goes so they can get it out the door.
Re:Multiple tax tables (Score:5, Informative)
Unless a program's tax table data structure isn't sufficiently fine-grained to deal with multiple tax tables that apply to different parts of a single year.
I can't speak for all payroll software packages, but QuickBooks can definitely handle this. All rates are specified with arbitrary effective dates. I'd be shocked if any payroll system could not handle mid-year changes. Stuff changes mid-year all the time.