yes
From the employer to the employee no difference gross pay earnings and social security wages earnings would be the same thing.
No, insurable earnings are not the same as net pay. Insurable earnings refer to the portion of an employee's income that is subject to insurance premiums, usually for benefits like unemployment or workers' compensation. Net pay, on the other hand, is the amount an employee takes home after all deductions, including taxes, retirement contributions, and other withholdings. While there may be some overlap, the two figures serve different purposes in payroll and insurance contexts.
yes
This year's retained earnings to net income.
Yes, they are the same thing. Net earnings is just another word for net income.
No, an earnings statement is not the same as a pay stub. An earnings statement provides a detailed breakdown of an individual's earnings and deductions over a specific period, while a pay stub is a document that shows the amount of money earned for a specific pay period and any deductions taken from that amount.
A company's earnings are equal to revenue less costs of production over a given period of time.
yes you can
yes
If company has the policy to not distribute profit as a dividend then retained earnings will be equal to net income otherwise dividend and retained earnings will be equal to net income.
The first $1 of your gross earnings will have some social security and medicare taxes withheld. FICA stands for "Federal Insurance Contributions Act." It's the tax withheld from your gross earnings salary or your NET profit from your self-employment income that funds the Social Security and Medicare programs. The (OASDI) Old Age Survivor and Disability Insurance (FICA) (social security and Medicare taxes) all mean the same tax for social security benefits (SSB or SSDI). All mean the same thing. For the tax year 2010 the social security and medicare tax is withheld by your employer payroll department from your first dollar of your gross earnings at the 7.65% rate. The 7.65% amount is matched by your employer for a total of 15.3% contribution to the SSA insurance trustee. Then you will also have other federal income tax amounts and other items that your employer payroll department will be required to withhold from your gross earnings before you will be issued your NET TAKE HOME paycheck. You should ask the employer payroll department for the amounts that they will have to withhold from your gross earnings.
The same as before your pregnancy!