No. The SSA gets your annual earned income information from the IRS using your Social Security number. The IRS keeps records of your wages and FICA contributions; the employer name or location is generally irrelevant.
An American worker can qualify for the benefits administered by the US Social Security Administration if he's a worker who worked a 540 hours in a year and loose his jobs.
You can request a statement from the Social Security Administration online or by visiting your local Social Security field office (online is much faster). See Sources and Related Links to access the request form.
Of course he does. Every American who has ever worked has a social security card. And contrary to internet myths, he has never had a fake card, nor a card that belonged to a dead person. Before he became president, he worked in a variety of jobs, and had all the things a working person is required to have for ID, including a social security number. Sorry your opinion does not trump the Social Security Administration who has verified that the SS# 042-68-4425 WAS NEVER ISSUED TO OBAMA. Your answer is totally rejected as wrong.
social security comes from the govt not from your husband
yes
It pulls up every place that you have worked. It is tied in to the IRS and Social Security databases.
If you think you may have money in a pension you should write to the personnel section of the court of administration, giving them the name they employed you under, you age and your social security number (and employee number if you have it) and ask them to check. That way you will get a definite answer.
No. Only those who have worked can get benefits.
The number of fiscal quarters the employee worked during his or her lifetime and the amount of money the employee contributed to the Social Security Trust Fund
My educated guess is zero. I do not think any US President every collected from social security. Very few recent presidents every worked for wages covered by social security.
To qualify for Social Security disability benefits, you must first have worked in jobs covered by Social Security. If your job is covered, then you must have a medical condition that meets Social Security's definition of disability.
Most people know that Social Security will approve a disability claim for acquired disabilities, e.g. those acquired as an adult, and congenital disability which occur at birth. SSD and SSDI are publicly funded. For SSD, Adults worked and paid into Social Security before becoming disabled. For SSDI, the person need not have worked, and the amount received is often less than SSD.However, in some industries, private insurers protect when disability occurs. The disability is evaluated through that insurer (not SSA), and is paid through them, not through the Social Security Administration.