Want this question answered?
The simple answer is no. This was taken directly from the Social Security Website..."After you retire, you may receive ­payments for work you did before you started getting Social Security benefits. Usually, those payments will not affect your Social Security benefit if they are for work done before you retired. This fact sheet describes some of the more common types of special payments, helps you to decide if you received any and tells you what steps to take if you did.What qualifies as special payments...If you worked for wages, income received after retirement counts as a special payment if the last thing you did to earn the payment was completed before you stopped working. Some special payments to employees include bonuses, accumulated vacation or sick pay, severance pay, back pay, standby pay, sales commissions and retirement payments or deferred compensation reported on a W-2 form for one year, but earned in a previous year. These amounts may be shown on your W-2 in the box labeled "Nonqualified Plan."
Social security payments for the husband stopped upon his death. If the child is under 22 (?) and is still in school, there may be payments due to the child. If you are receiving checks on your own behalf as a widow, those checks are not subject to child support payments. You can call Social Security directly or look online for this information.
I think you are asking if Social Security will be avaialble when someone retires twenty years from now. The answer is yes. The literature that came with the last Social Security update states Social Security will not be in danger until at least twenty thirty seven. And even then it will not completely disappear.
Social Security Disability payments are available to those who have a disability expected to last more than a year. Short term disability is considered to be for six months and is not included in benefits. This is from the Disability Benefits brochure available online.
The Social Security Act is known as SSA; those are also the initials for the agency that administers it, the Social Security Administration.
For most people, the taxpayer ID is a Social Security number, but ITINs provide a means to efficiently process and account for tax returns and payments for those not eligible for Social Security Numbers. All the information is available at the IRS website.
Some businesses offer Social Security name changes or cards for a fee. Social Security provides those services and more for free. Do not pay for something we will give you free. Social Security is the best place to get information about Social Security.
Do postal employees get social security
transfer payments
Will Social Security checks come early because of the holiday
Those people who receive social security get the COLA as well as civil servic retirees.
Social Security is not a solution for unemployment. It was meant for those retiring or disabled and was contributed to while the person was working. Unemployment benefits are paid into the system by businesses for those who lose their jobs.