Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget
Terri Fayle
(19 Aug 2011 15:26 EST)
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Re: Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget
Nicole Braman
(19 Aug 2011 15:47 EST)
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Re: Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget
Legeai, Randall J
(19 Aug 2011 16:01 EST)
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Re: Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget
Terri Fayle
(22 Aug 2011 08:41 EST)
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Re: Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget
rdewey@mcdaniel.edu
(22 Aug 2011 09:19 EST)
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Re: Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget Riggs, Mitzi (22 Aug 2011 09:29 EST)
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Re: Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget
White-Jones, Teresa
(22 Aug 2011 09:53 EST)
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Re: Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget
rdewey@mcdaniel.edu
(22 Aug 2011 09:53 EST)
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Re: Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget
Kris Wolff
(19 Aug 2011 15:53 EST)
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Re: Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget
Susan E Morris
(19 Aug 2011 16:24 EST)
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Re: Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget
Carril, Matthew
(22 Aug 2011 15:32 EST)
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Re: subrecipient invoices
Barbara DeHaven
(23 Aug 2011 07:15 EST)
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An increase of 5% on your benefit rate, makes your new benefit rate 31.5%, not 35%. Mitzi __________________________________________________________ Mitzi M. Riggs, CRA Research Administration Coordinator College of Engineering, Architecture & Technology Oklahoma State University 201 Advanced Technology Research Center, Stillwater, OK 74078 Email: xxxxxx@okstate.edu Phone: 405-744-6562; Fax: 405-744-3189 -----Original Message----- From: Research Administration List [mailto:xxxxxx@lists.healthresearch.org] On Behalf Of xxxxxx@mcdaniel.edu Sent: Monday, August 22, 2011 9:19 AM To: xxxxxx@lists.healthresearch.org Subject: Re: [RESADM-L] Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget I'm a numbers person at heart. So when looking at things like this, I always look at the numbers first. Say you have a PI at 100k, 30% fringe, 20% effort, and 3% inflation rate. Year 1: 20,000 salary and 6,000 benefits. Year 2: 20,600 salary and 6,180 benefits. Year 2 with an "extra" 5% padding for benefits: 20,600 salary and 7,210 benefits So a 5% increase in the fringe benefit rate is an additional 1,030 burden to the budget. I personally have to do this to get an idea exactly what amount of money we are discussing. Now, I think issue can be looked at from different viewpoints. As a state institution, do your fringe rates vary that greatly from year to year? At the private institutions where I have worked, they do not. At one institution they have not yet changed since I have been here. At the other institution the changes were less than 1%, and one year they went down and not up. (Granted, they were self-insured, which I think made a huge difference). I would think 5%, as used in my example above, would be extreme. You also have to consider consistency. In an ideal world, applications from the same institution to the same funding agency should use the same calculation methods. Since it's the application stage I don't really think cost principles apply...but it's just good business practice. As for fringes being negotiated on the F&A, I can not answer that question. Robin On 8/22/11 9:41 AM, "Terri Fayle" <xxxxxx@K-STATE.EDU> wrote: >This argument has been given, and I don't disagree with it. However, I >have been in situations where the salary DID go up and the fringes ALSO >went up. This practice is fine if one or the other goes up, but you're >short if they both go up. > >The argument has also been given to increase the salaries by double what >you normally do to cover the increase in fringes. I don't see how that's >any different or LESS inconsistent than inflating the fringes. > >Is it true then, if your fringe rates on negotiated on your F&A rate >agreement (at my previous institution they were not), those are the only >rates you can use?? > >t. > >Terri L. Fayle >Senior Grant Specialist >K-State Research & Extension Proposal Services >Waters Hall 105C >Kansas State University >Manhattan, KS 66506-4008 >xxxxxx@k-state.edu > >Voice 785-532-7255 >FAX 785-532-5549 >Cell 660-238-7165 > >----- Original Message ----- >From: "Randall J Legeai" <xxxxxx@TULANE.EDU> >To: xxxxxx@lists.healthresearch.org >Sent: Friday, August 19, 2011 4:01:26 PM >Subject: Re: [RESADM-L] Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget > >If you are using a fringe *rate* (i.e. a percentage of salary), and you >build in an annual salary escalation as most people do, your fringe >amounts will be escalated as well. >- Randy. > >-----Original Message----- >From: Research Administration List >[mailto:xxxxxx@lists.healthresearch.org] On Behalf Of Nicole Braman >Sent: Friday, August 19, 2011 3:47 PM >To: xxxxxx@lists.healthresearch.org >Subject: Re: [RESADM-L] Inflation of Fringe Benefits in Proposed Budget > >We use an inflation rate on the salary, not fringe. Although this year we >had a significant fringe increase, so I am wondering if it isn't a valid >practice to increase fringe as well. I am curious what others have to say. > >Nicole > >Terri Fayle wrote: >> All, >> >> I'd be interested to hear your comments regarding inflation of fringe >>benefits while creating a proposal budget. My institution uses a >>published estimated rate for certain employee classes. But when the >>charges actually hit the grant budget, it is the actual amount of >>charges for that employee, so in most cases different than what was >>proposed. >> >> Typically, no inflation is applied to fringes when creating multiple >>year budgets. Since I'm new here, I did! It has been suggested that I >>cannot inflate fringes because I am being inconsistent with the >>institutional published estimated rate. I say poppycock! I used the >>published estimated rate and added a bit! That's what you do to protect >>your investigators budget. >> >> What say you?? >> >> Terri L. Fayle >> Senior Grant Specialist >> K-State Research & Extension Proposal Services Waters Hall 105C Kansas >> State University Manhattan, KS 66506-4008 xxxxxx@k-state.edu >> >> Voice 785-532-7255 >> FAX 785-532-5549 >> Cell 660-238-7165 >> >> >> ====================================================================== >> Instructions on how to use the RESADM-L Mailing List, including >> subscription information and a web-searchable archive, are available >> via our web site at http://www.healthresearch.org (click on the >> "LISTSERV" link in the upper right corner) >> >> A link directly to helpful tips: http://tinyurl.com/resadm-l-help >> ====================================================================== >> >> > > >====================================================================== > Instructions on how to use the RESADM-L Mailing List, including >subscription information and a web-searchable archive, are available via >our web site at http://www.healthresearch.org (click on the "LISTSERV" >link in the upper right corner) > > A link directly to helpful tips: http://tinyurl.com/resadm-l-help >====================================================================== > > >====================================================================== > Instructions on how to use the RESADM-L Mailing List, including > subscription information and a web-searchable archive, are available > via our web site at http://www.healthresearch.org (click on the > "LISTSERV" link in the upper right corner) > > A link directly to helpful tips: http://tinyurl.com/resadm-l-help >====================================================================== > > >====================================================================== > Instructions on how to use the RESADM-L Mailing List, including > subscription information and a web-searchable archive, are available > via our web site at http://www.healthresearch.org (click on the > "LISTSERV" link in the upper right corner) > > A link directly to helpful tips: http://tinyurl.com/resadm-l-help >====================================================================== ====================================================================== Instructions on how to use the RESADM-L Mailing List, including subscription information and a web-searchable archive, are available via our web site at http://www.healthresearch.org (click on the "LISTSERV" link in the upper right corner) A link directly to helpful tips: http://tinyurl.com/resadm-l-help ====================================================================== ====================================================================== Instructions on how to use the RESADM-L Mailing List, including subscription information and a web-searchable archive, are available via our web site at http://www.healthresearch.org (click on the "LISTSERV" link in the upper right corner) A link directly to helpful tips: http://tinyurl.com/resadm-l-help ======================================================================