Although we all hear about how expensive  it is to be a business owner, most people rarely consider how costly  it can be to hire new employees. CNN Money posted a very interesting  article on why an employee making $14 per hour can really cost their  employer as much as $20 an hour. 
You probably cost your boss a lot more  than you think you do.
For Jim Garland, who owns a corporate  aircraft cleaning and support services company, a $14 per hour worker  has a true cost of $19.63 per hour, or about 40% more than base pay.  This so-called "loaded rate" includes fixed expenses -- federal  and state taxes, health insurance, workman's compensation, uniforms,  and paid time off -- along with soft costs like the time spent training  a new hire.
Washington's lawmakers are throwing a  lot of ammo at reducing the jobless rate, including a new tax break  for hiring the unemployed. But no matter what incentives the government  offers, it's hard to convince business owners to hire until they're  absolutely certain they need to. Employees are often the most expensive  investment a business makes.
"Our entire existence revolves around  two numbers: revenue and payroll," Garland said of Sharp Details,  in Dulles, Va., which he launched out of his car trunk in 1991. Payroll  for 60 workers accounts for around 70% of his firm's operating costs.
 
Garland outsources his entire human resource  department. Joe Sherrier, director of human resources for Employment  Enterprises -- the company that manages Garland's HR -- said that as  a general rule, business owners should to expect an employee to cost  an additional 25% to 30% on top of base salary each year.
 
