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    How Switching to Remote Work Can Double a Worker’s Effective Hourly Rate

    I’ve been re-reading financial independence classic “Your Money or Your Life” and it struck me that the exercise where you calculate you “effective hourly wage” after including all work-related expenses (commute, clothes, etc.) is probably one that many people could benefit from doing during this pandemic. I say this because many people during COVID-19, who have been fortunate enough to keep their jobs, have been forced into remote work situations. As a result they’re not commuting each day, eating lunch out of the house, dressing up in work appropriate attire, or doing many of the other things that would normally be required.

    In order to do this analysis I’ve created some assumptions about the person and the life changes they are seeing:

    • Lives in California, at tax rate of 30% of gross salary
    • Makes $100K annual salary, before taxes
    • Spouse does not work
    • Works 40 hours per week
    • Has 2 weeks of paid vacation and 2 weeks of sick days
    • Used to commute 45 minutes each way, 5 days a week (6.5 hours total)
    • Commuted by car with $400/month payment, using 1 $50 tank of gas per week
    • Paid $100/month for car insurance
    • Spent $15/day for lunch + $5/day afternoon coffee at the corner deli/cafe
    • Spent $300/week for after school care for 2 kids from 3 – 6pm
    • Spends $2K/year for work-related clothes and any dry cleaning
    • Spends $50 each week on after work food/drinks with colleagues 

    Calculating the Effective Hourly Rate

    The simple math to calculate our hourly pay says we take $100K and divide it by 48 working weeks, and then divide that by 40 hours per week = $52.08/hour

    This simple math is misleading, because it doesn’t take into account all the unpaid time and unreimbursed expenses that are involved in the lifestyle of a commuting worker. To create a more accurate picture, we can calculate as follows:

    $100K salary – 30% Taxes ($30K) – Yearly Expenses ($14.4K afterschool care + $4.8K car payment + $2.4K gas + $4.8K on food + $1.2K car insurance +$2K clothes / dry cleaning + $2.4K after work food/drink) = $38K effective annual income

    Now divide this by 1,920 working hours (48 weeks at 40 hours per week) = $19.79/hour

    And we still haven’t added in the 312 unpaid hours spent on commuting, bringing us to $42.8K divided by (1,920 working hours +312 commuting hours) = $17.03/hour effective hourly rate

    This is how the math works out, and why someone who has finally broken through to making that elusive status symbol of “six figures” can still be struggling to get by with less than $20/hour of effective real hourly wages after taxes and work-related expenses. 

    Given the general recommendation to spend 30-50% of gross salary on housing, this person might feel spending $30K – $50K on rent/mortgage ($2,500 – $4,200 per month) makes sense, especially for a family of 4 needing a 3 bedroom place within a 45 minute drive to the office. At the low end of housing cost, this leaves ~$1,000/month to cover all discretionary spending (food, Internet, cell phones, healthcare,home and car repairs, etc) and on the high end the family is now spending more than they make simply to put a roof over their heads. It is likely that the spouse, if there is one, will have to take on at least part time work to make this situation sustainable.

    How the Numbers Change for Remote Workers

    Now let’s look at the effective hourly wage for the remote worker who does not commute or own a car, needs no after school care for the kids, does not by specialized clothes for the office costuming, and saves $10/day by needing just $5 for their lunch meal and afternoon coffee at home. They are also reimbursed by the company for their high speed Internet service, and their calculation looks like this:

    $100K salary – 30% Taxes ($30K) – Yearly Expenses ($1.2K on food) + Reimbursements ($1.2K high speed Internet) = $70K effective annual income

    They also do not commute, so we don’t have to add in those extra hours spent on the road. $70K divided by (40 hours x 48 weeks) = $36.46/hour effective hourly rate


    Wow. From $17.03/hour to $36.46/hour. The switch to working remote has more than doubled this person’s effective hourly rate. 

    Obviously your mileage may vary, and you might include or exclude different variables for your own calculation, but it is clear the move to remote work confers major benefits on workers. 

    This post doesn’t even begin to dive into the benefits to companies, like not having to lease commercial real estate and manage physical spaces, but that is widely covered elsewhere. If you’re considering making remote work a permanent part of your life, possibly combined with a move to a lower cost of living place with more favorable tax rates, this is something to keep in mind.

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    Personal Projects I’m Enjoying

    Despite living in an unpredictable world filled with death during the COVID pandemic, I’ve been finding a lot of joy lately in my personal projects.

    On the public facing side of things, I have:

    • Led a team of volunteer software engineers to help Clinica Colorado launch CovidLine, a Twilio-based IVR and call routing solution that provides multi-lingual symptom screening and free telehealth doctor visits for the uninsured and undocumented in Colorado.
    • Started a public equity investing newsletter where I publicly share my decision-making process, which includes a mission to evaluate every company underlying the Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund (VTSAX) one company at a time.
    • Started a free online cooking class newsletter focused on making the foods I’m passionate about accessible to anyone who wants to try.

    On the home front, my inner life development continues and if you follow me on social media you might be getting glimpses of some of these projects:

    • Self-reliance, prepping, and cultivating some homesteading skills including growing some of my own pizza toppings. (I was even quoted at the end of this long-form piece on “Silicon Valley Preppers” in the New York Times featuring my friends at ThePrepared.com)
    • Journaling and reading extensively around grief. As I processed the end of Mattermark over the past couple year, I’ve realized that loss brought up a lot of old wounds that didn’t receive the attention and tenderness they needed to heal. I’m working to give that to myself now, accept my anger at the sense of abandonment I felt at the time, and reframe those stories as the broader tragedies they were (a teen suicide, a friend’s drug overdose and subsequent months in a coma) without centering on myself and my pain.
    • Upping my impeccability level when it comes to all manner of cyclical and entropic life processes like chores, household management, personal finance, self care, hygiene and exercise. They all involve compounding and require long-term thinking, and I have room for improvement in connecting my day-to-day actions with my longer term vision for my life.
    • Staying in touch with friends through texts, calls, Zoom double dates and other channels, but also working harder to notice the truth of how close we really are (or aren’t), accepting that, and modifying my expectations and engagement model accordingly. I have found a mobile app called Fabriq extremely helpful for this.
    • Continuing to read extensively, though I am significantly behind track for my goal of finishing 200 books this year with 30 completed so far.

    And of course, my journey as a home chef continues…

    Photo by Danielle Morrill on May 24, 2020. Image may contain: dessert and food

    8” 4 Layer Yellow Cake with Chocolate Frosting
    Photo by Danielle Morrill on May 24, 2020.
    Piperade based pasta or pizza sauce (Thomas Keller’s recipe)
    Photo by Danielle Morrill on May 24, 2020. Image may contain: food
    Pizza crust made with sourdough starter
    Photo by Danielle Morrill on May 25, 2020. Image may contain: drink
    Homemade Kansas Style BBQ sauce
    Photo by Danielle Morrill on May 25, 2020. Image may contain: drink
    Dehydrated limes and oranges for cocktail garnish – Hemingway Daquiri
    Photo by Danielle Morrill on April 12, 2020. Image may contain: food and indoor
    Grandma’s cinnamon rolls – from my Clark Family cookbook
    Photo by Danielle Morrill on April 12, 2020. Image may contain: food
    With cream cheese frosting of course
    Photo by Danielle Morrill on March 23, 2020. Image may contain: food
    Roasting meat in the sous vide, finishing with the SearzAll
    Photo by Danielle Morrill on March 23, 2020. Image may contain: food

    For more food pics, make sure to follow me on Instagram!