boston massacre
EOG Master
Liberal Snowflakes All Excited About The Bike Ride.
not accurate.....
he would need approval from congress just another lie from bunkerboy
Trump said if re elected he’d make the payroll tax cuts permanent
Social security and Medicare are directly funded by payroll taxes
Actually Social Security and Medicare are separate from payroll taxes.
Actually Social Security and Medicare are separate from payroll taxes.
Prove where I'm wrong please.
Just wishing it doesn't exactly cut it.
So employers don't pay a share of FICA now? LOL.
Currently, the FICA tax rate is 15.3% of the employee’s gross pay: 12.4% for Social Security tax and 2.9% for Medicare tax.
Of that 15.3%, the employer and employee each pay 7.65%.
https://bench.co/blog/tax-tips/fica-tax/
Again. Wishing I'm wrong isn't proving it.
They are not funded by payroll taxes entirely.
That is a fact and I just proved it to you.
Your words:
Actually Social Security and Medicare are separate from payroll taxes.
They are separate. What part of employer FICA taxes do you not understand?
Thank you for proving that employers are taxed for FICA - which I've already done.
more of the shell game
President Donald Trump announced over the weekend that if Congress wouldn’t extend the $600 enhanced unemployment insurance, he would do something himself.
“I’m taking action to provide an additional or an extra $400 per week in expanded benefits,” Trump said Saturday at his golf club in New Jersey.
But $400 is not $600, which is what the benefit was until it expired at the end of July. And it turns out the extra $400 is actually just $300, unless states feel like adding another $100. And the money isn’t technically an unemployment benefit, possibly because it’s legally dubious. And it could take weeks for states to deliver.
If any laid-off workers watching the president’s news conference over the weekend thought they were about to get paid, they might wind up disappointed.
“It’s setting up workers’ expectations that they’re going to get a benefit that there’s almost no way they’re going to get,” said Michele Evermore, an unemployment insurance expert with the National Employment Law Project.