mwa- If you work for wages, each pay period you are paid a gross amount for that period, which can either be an hourly rate times the number of hours worked, or a straight-time rate for that period. For example, if you get paid bi-weekly and get the same amount regardless of the number of hours you work, that is a straight-time rate of pay.
Your employer then calculates the gross pay, income tax withholding amount, FICA withholding amount (which includes 6.2% for SS and 1.45% for Medicare), and any other deductions from your gross pay that are applicable (401K, etc). You then receive a check for the net amount after all withholding deductions.
Your employer then matches the 7.65% withholding amount for FICA and sends that amount, plus your income tax withholding amount, to the Gov't on a predetermined time period, in your name, as a 941 payment.
The reduction in the payroll tax rate for SS will not affect your taxable income amount, but it will reduce the withholding from your gross pay each pay period, which will result in more net pay that you see in your check. The other part of the story is that the amount sent to your SS account will be reduced, and if nothing is done to offset it, the total SS fund will receive less money. Since SS is already forecast to run out of money, this payroll tax reduction, without some additional funds from somewhere, will run out of money sooner, and that is the part of this story that isn't being fully disclosed.
Your employer then calculates the gross pay, income tax withholding amount, FICA withholding amount (which includes 6.2% for SS and 1.45% for Medicare), and any other deductions from your gross pay that are applicable (401K, etc). You then receive a check for the net amount after all withholding deductions.
Your employer then matches the 7.65% withholding amount for FICA and sends that amount, plus your income tax withholding amount, to the Gov't on a predetermined time period, in your name, as a 941 payment.
The reduction in the payroll tax rate for SS will not affect your taxable income amount, but it will reduce the withholding from your gross pay each pay period, which will result in more net pay that you see in your check. The other part of the story is that the amount sent to your SS account will be reduced, and if nothing is done to offset it, the total SS fund will receive less money. Since SS is already forecast to run out of money, this payroll tax reduction, without some additional funds from somewhere, will run out of money sooner, and that is the part of this story that isn't being fully disclosed.