Yes (short answer). Each state may impose a higher minimum wage than another but never lower than the federal government's mandate (currently: $5.15). You need to check with the local government. Most states do adhere strictly to the federal standard (neither raising or lowering their own standard). Vermont is, for example, one state which has a higher rate (though I don't recall their rate).
Sorry, I read the question wrong... thought you were asking about min. wage. Of course there's no other way to find the wage rate without the hours and total amount. Simple algebra:
r * h = t (r: rate per hour, h: hours worked, t: total amount earned)
2006-06-15 09:28:31
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answer #1
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answered by say2joe 3
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I'd say no. You need to divide hours into gross for hourly wage. No way around it with 2 of 3 parts missing.
2006-06-15 09:30:17
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answer #2
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answered by busterp 3
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Take you monthly salary and divide it by 120 hours, that's a little lower than your hourly rate because of taxes.
2006-06-15 09:31:21
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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nope. you need the paystub. take the amount paid and divide it by the hours worked, that's how much you make an hour (NET) but gross is how much the employer said you would make. (no taxes taken out).
2006-06-15 09:29:01
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answer #4
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answered by J♥dida 3
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