The Payroll Problem Nobody Has Solved Yet

29.04.26 03:09 PM - By Linq HR

Ask any payroll professional whether a single unified global payroll system is truly achievable and you'll likely get a sigh. 

The idea is enormously appealing. One platform, one process, one source of truth for every employee, everywhere. But is it realistic, or just aspirational?

To appreciate the challenge, consider how vastly countries can differ. Even within the same region, Singapore sits at the simpler end of the spectrum where employers have no legal obligation to withhold income tax from employee salaries, social security is administered through a single centralised fund (the CPF), and annual tax reporting is straightforward (Lano, n.d.). 

Australia, by contrast, now ranks as the third most complex payroll market in the world after a 21% year-on-year increase in its complexity score (Frontier Software, 2026). 

Australian payroll teams must navigate Single Touch Payroll (STP) Phase 2 reporting to the ATO, superannuation guarantee contributions, PAYG withholding, Fair Work Act compliance, award interpretation obligations that intersect with enterprise agreements, and state based payroll tax thresholds that vary across every jurisdiction, strict payment timings when employees leave. That's a formidable local puzzle and it multiplies rapidly when you go to multiple company payrolls for the same company.

Every country adds its own tax authority reporting formats, statutory contribution schemes, labour law quirks, and data privacy regimes. GDPR in Europe, for instance, imposes strict rules on where employee data can be stored, making a truly centralised global database potentially legally treacherous. Currency, language, and cultural payroll norms such as 13th month payments, add further friction. Then add flexible work arrangement where employees spend considerable time periods working from overseas locations which cross taxation boundaries.

And yet the business case for unification remains compelling. As Eshtairy (2026) notes, fragmented multi vendor payroll models create limited visibility, inconsistent employee experiences, and compliance risk that grows with every new country. A unified platform promises real time reporting, standardised processes, and meaningful cost efficiency.

The honest reality? True unification with one codebase and one ruleset, is almost certainly beyond reach in the near future. What is emerging though is payroll harmonisation: aggregated platforms connecting local payrolls under a single analytics layer. Not one payroll, but one view. For most multinationals, that may be more than enough. At least for now.

Ready to simplify your payroll setup? Our workforce directory will soon connect you with vetted payroll solution providers and payroll recruitment specialists across Australia and beyond. 

References
Eshtairy, M. (2026) 'Global payroll without complexity: the case for a unified solution across 160 countries', HRMorning, 28 April. Available at: https://www.hrmorning.com/articles/global-payroll-unified-solution.

Frontier Software (2026) Payroll complexity: turning complexity into strategic advantage, Frontier Software. Available at: https://au.frontiersoftware.com/whitepapers/payroll-complexity-turning-complexity-strategic-advantage.

Lano (n.d.) 'Running payroll in Singapore', Lano. Available at: https://www.lano.io/global-payroll-guide/singapore.