Overtime Laws |
U.S. Federal Overtime Law
U.S. Federal Overtime Law ExplainedPayMyOvertime.com is a free content website providing information to educate the working public about their rights when they work overtime. This is a general guide, and in no way meant to replace the advice of a qualified attorney of law. In the United States, the Fair Labor
Standards Act of 1938 establishes a standard work week of 40 hours for
certain kinds of workers, and mandates payment for overtime hours to those
workers of one and one-half times the worker's normal rate of pay for any
time worked above 40 hours. The law creates two broad categories of
workers, those that are "exempt" from the regulation and those that are
"non-exempt". Classes of workers that are exempt from the regulation
include certain types of administrative, professional, and managerial
employees. Under the law, employers are not required to pay exempt
employees overtime but must do so for non-exempt employees. Out of
approximately 120 million American workers, nearly 50 million are exempt
from overtime laws (U.S Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division,
1998). As a result, Americans rank near the top for the average number of
hours worked per year (1,979) compared to other advanced capitalist
nations. (International
Labor Organization, Table 6b).
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