No one If you have no one else in the family that works then you won't earn anything but if say your husband for example was still working then he would earn wages.
A wage earner is a person who earns a wage, especially one which supports a household.
A wage earner is a person who earns a wage, especially one which supports a household.
The letters refer to the status of the claimant: wage earner, spouse of wage earner, child of wage earner, etc.
The letters after the Medicare claim number refer to the status of the claimant: i.e., wage earner, spouse of wage earner, child of wage earner, etc.
The letters after your Medicare claim number refer to the status of the claimant: i.e., wage earner, spouse of wage earner, child of wage earner, etc.
The letters after the Medicare claim number refer to the status of the claimant: i.e., wage earner, spouse of wage earner, child of wage earner, etc.
'A' refers to the wage earner's account (vs. the wage earner's spouse and/or minor dependent children, etc., who might also qualify for SSA based on the wage earner's record).
The Wage Earner refers to the person who is working that is responsible (gives financial support) for the individual (also known as the beneficiary) who is applying to receive benefits from Social Security. With Child Disability claims this would be the mother or father that is employed. For retirement it would be yourself.
A wage earner at a company
It is true. I have failed it by putting false. So the answer is true.
It's another name for a chapter 13.
Usually those letters are at the end of the Medicare claim number. "A" refers to the wage earner on whose record Medicare eligibility is based (versus, e.g., the wage earner's spouse).