There is no answer because my question was cut short. Sorry.
Nothing is free. If the users of media don't pay for it who will. Taxpayers? A, taxpayers already pay for too many things, supporting the media is not a necessity; B, not all taxpayers are regular users of media and should not have to pay for what they don't use. So, the answer is no.
Social Security/Medicare will let you know whether/what you have to pay. Very few people have to pay for Part A; everyone pays for Part B.
no u just need 2 pay 2 b a member
To calculate B. J. Swanson's gross pay per pay period, divide his annual salary of $37,500 by the number of pay periods in a year. Since he is paid semimonthly, there are 24 pay periods in a year. Therefore, his gross pay per pay period is $37,500 ÷ 24, which equals approximately $1,562.50.
The mean/pay level
AnswerPart A is free. You have to pay for part B (it can be deducted from your social security check) and yes you can decline to take it. I wouldn't recommend this as group insurance will continue to pay as though you did have part B (by estimating) and supplement policies won't pay anything in this situation.
10000
no
No, because think about how many smart people in the world there are if a teacher would pay a student say like $2 a B and their class was a class of thirty people and that would be like $60 considering everyone in the class gets at least a B.
The primary will pay first. If the primary happens to be traditional Medicare.......They (MedicarePart B will pay 80%) and the Secondary should cover the remaining 20%. That is after your annual deductible of $165.00 has been met.
Medicaid should pick up anything that Medicare doesn't pay for.
Benefit taxation can relate only to the financing of public services and not to the redistributive function of the tax transfer process.Under this approach, the tax problem is viewed by itself, independent of the expenditure determination.Horizontal EquityTaxationaccording to ability to pay calls for people with equal capacity to pay the sameVertical EquityFor people with greater ability to pay, they pay more. Person A , whose income is higher , should pay more than B. Implementation of either rule requires a quantitative measure of ability to pay . Ideally this measure is reflected in income, expenditure and wealth.