I am currently paid by a body shop, and I asked myself this question recently here's what I came up with:
- W = Work. actual number of work days, not counting week-ends, holidays and vacations etc. For me, it's 218.
- Y = Yearly bank input, as in "what gets in my bank account".
- E = Employer's cost factor. What I cost yearly to my employer. Roughly 1.8 * Y, if I recall correctly.
- M = The employer's margin to what the customer actually pays. I have not come around asking, but I speculate it is between 1.2 * E and 1.5 * E.
- R = The self-employment risk factor. It must account for slow periods, and various issues that can be caused by not having a constant income. Arbitrarily set to 2. Should be lower for long or recurrent missions.
- P = Premium. Some self-employed jobs can be very taxing in requiring very intense work in a short period of time, stress, or other unpleasant things you do not normally have as an employee. Base value 1, increase as needed.
So, the self-employed daily rate should be something like:
daily rate = Y / W * E * M * R * P = between 1/25*P Y/50*P and 1/20*PY/40*P.
Ballpark calculation. Of course, many factors differ with the contry country and the personal situation.
