Non qualified according to Turbotax
For the US Army, pensions are based upon time in grade, years of service, and rank at time of retirement. 50% base pay at 20 years, 75% at 30 years. And collect immediately after retiring. For the US Army Reserves/Guard: they go by points and years of service. And collect at age 60.
Base Pay is what the serviceman is being paid, WITHOUT: housing pay, combat duty pay, jump pay, food allowance pay, dependent(s) pay, over-seas pay, uniform allowance pay, etc.
Military pay (Basic Pay) is determined by rank and longevity of service, not by actual job. The highest paying military "jobs" are the highest ranking military officers; admirals for the Navy and Coast Guard and generals for the rest. Some "jobs" within the military may have special pays associated with them due to the technical requirements or dangers associated with a particular job. These special pays are, however, limited in the amount they pay. Special pays range from as little as $75 per month to a high of no more than $400 per month (may be old data as I have been retired from the military for about 8-9 years).
They wouldn't get paid, this just meant that the soldiers did not have to pay for taxes e.t.cBASICALLY - the romans pay would be transferred onto their taxes, so women would have to pay taxes on their houses while when the men are in the army or have retired from the army they wouldn't have to pay anything.Hope this helps :D
The pay of a retired four-star general in the US Army is determined by the years of service and the retired pay base. For each year of service, the retired pay base is multiplied by a percentage, ranging from 50% for 20 years up to 100% for 40 years. Assuming you have 37 years of service, your retired pay would likely be a percentage of the retired pay base, depending on the specific details of your service.
Depends how long he served. 20 years = 50% base pay, 30 years = 75% base pay. It also depends on what year he retired, as the base pay goes up 3-5% every year, so he receives whatever his base pay WAS, not what it is NOW.
A retired gunnery sergeant makes around 2,000 dollars every month. This is just the base pay not including disabilities.
yes because he put his life at risk
Generally no but you should contact Medicare for a full answer.
Do you think that a retired AIG executive who is receiving a $10 million annual pension should be exempt from taxes? We base income taxes on how much you make. We give a generous allowance to low income people. People who make more have to pay something to support the country.
No, retired individuals typically do not pay FICA (Federal Insurance Contributions Act) taxes, which include Social Security and Medicare taxes, on their retirement income. However, if they have other sources of income, such as wages from part-time work, they may be subject to FICA taxes on that income.
yes
1992
It is a bit hard to say specifically. The normal retirement pay is based on salary at end of service, which in turn is based on rank and years of service. It will be between 50% and 75% of the base salary. At 20 years (Generals are going to have more than 20 years, it is very unusual to achieve star rank in less than 20 years) you get 50%. You get an additional 2.5% for each additional year after 20 to a maximum of 75%. Based on the 2010 pay charts it would be between $75,516 and $79,314. That does not include full medical benefits and access to military exchanges.
yes
no, "base pay" is a set amount prescribed by the employer.