Salaried workers directly benefiting from the increase in the overtime salary threshold, by major industry, 2015

Total salaried workers* Directly benefiting salaried workers** Share of industry’s salaried workers that are directly benefiting Industry’s share of directly benefiting workers Industry’s share of total salaried workforce
(A) (B) (C)=(B/A) (D)=(Bx/B1) (E)=(Ax/A1)
All (1) 53,717,000 12,502,000 23.3% 100.0% 100.0%
Agriculture, forestry, fishing, and hunting 333,000 132,000 39.7% 1.1% 0.6%
Mining 390,000 62,000 15.9% 0.5% 0.7%
Construction 2,395,000 780,000 32.6% 6.2% 4.5%
Manufacturing 5,419,000 1,141,000 21.1% 9.1% 10.1%
Wholesale and retail trade 5,435,000 1,698,000 31.2% 13.6% 10.1%
Transportation and utilities 1,999,000 557,000 27.8% 4.5% 3.7%
Information 1,489,000 319,000 21.4% 2.5% 2.8%
Financial activities 5,315,000 1,238,000 23.3% 9.9% 9.9%
Professional and business services 7,543,000 1,567,000 20.8% 12.5% 14.0%
Educational and health services 16,311,000 2,568,000 15.7% 20.5% 30.4%
Leisure and hospitality 2,572,000 959,000 37.3% 7.7% 4.8%
Other services 2,061,000 684,000 33.2% 5.5% 3.8%
Public administration 2,456,000 798,000 32.5% 6.4% 4.6%

* The sample reflects salaried (nonhourly) workers who are subject to the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). This excludes certain groups of workers such as the self-employed, most federal workers, religious workers, many agricultural workers, and many transportation workers.

** Directly benefiting salaried workers are those who will newly be guaranteed overtime protection by virtue of their salary alone under the higher overtime threshold, i.e., they make at least $455 a week (the old threshold) but less than $913 a week (the new threshold in 2015 dollars). This includes workers who are newly eligible (they were excluded from automatic overtime protection because they were classified, in some cases incorrectly, as executive, administrative, and professional or "EAP" employees); and workers whose rights are strengthened (they were at risk of being classified as EAP employees).

Note: Subtotals may not add up to total due to rounding. The estimates consider all the workers who directly benefit from the federal salary threshold increase alone, and do not include a subset of salaried California and New York workers already covered by state thresholds higher than the old federal threshold.

Source: EPI analysis of the U.S. Department of Labor's proposed (July 6, 2015) and final (May 18, 2016) rule, "Defining and Delimiting the Exemptions for Executive, Administrative, Professional, Outside Sales and Computer Employees," 29 CFR Part 541; and Current Population Survey Outgoing Rotation Group microdata, 2015

View the underlying data on epi.org.