Included under the definition of employees for futa purposes are
Federal Unemployment tax (FUTA) is levied on the employer at 6.2% of wages paid up to $7000 per employee per year.
Most employers pay both a Federal and a state unemployment tax. Only the employer pays FUTA tax; it is not deducted from the employee's wages. Go to the IRS gov website and use the search box for Federal Unemployment Tax
no. the only things that can garnish your wages is federal and state.
false
If you payed federal or state income withholding from wages you might get these monies returned
Discouraged or disgruntled workers may opt to stay at home and boycott duty leading to unemployment, as a result of low wages or bad working conditions.
It depends on your gross earnings; The new withholding tables are based on a percentage of gross taxable wages. "Gross taxable wages" is the amount that meets the federal definition of "wages".
I've had an unemployment overpayment in Iowa for nearly 10 years and have never had any of my wages garnished.
Disequilibrium unemployment, also known as real wage unemployment or classical unemployment exists primarily for 2 reasons: 1) trade unions or labor organizations bargain for higher wages, or 2) government mandates some minimum wages.
becuse was the wages
yes
Generally, elected officials are not eligible for unemployment.