rachel wrote:
What a toad you are Rookard!
Does this regulation say "all" employers are required as you interpret Rookard? No!.... It say most employers. You cant be considered an employer unless you are employing one or more employee's now can you...JACK A*S!
Where have I said otherwise? If you have no employees, it is awful hard to be an employer.
And wheres the law that requires every proprietors to pay 3121(a) "wages" as defined for 3121(b) "employment" as defined for purposes of Social Security to every employee?
It is not a matter of "requiring" ... it is a matter of ... if I am an employer, and I pay employees, is what I pay them wages under the law? We look to the law to determine whether what he pays is wages.
Indeed, an employer may choose to pay his employees solely in the form of health care benefits ... and these are not wages under social security ... but I doubt that most employees would want to do that.
There's an idea for you Rachel ... if you don't want to be paid in "wages" ... then look at the definition of what is excluded from "wages" ... and tell your employer you want to be paid only in those forms that are not wages.
You can choose to be paid in the form of health benefits, 401 contributions, fringe benefits, etc. Those are not wages.
It might be a little hard to live getting paid like that. But you might end up getting quite a bit that way.
rachel wrote:You have never answered that question ...why?
Eminently silly question?
rachel wrote:§ 422.112 Employer identification numbers.
(a) General. Most employers are required
by section 6109 of the Internal
Revenue Code and by Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) regulations at 26 CFR
31.6011(b)–1 to obtain an employer identification
number (EIN) and to include
it on wage reports filed with SSA. A
sole proprietor who does not pay wages
to one or more employees or who is not
required to file any pension or excise
tax return is not subject to this requirement.
This regulation is stating three things Rookard!
First, its saying that any proprietor who doesnt pay any "wages" for
Social Security purposes to one or more employee's is not required to obtain the EIN.
No, it doesn't say "any" employer. It says "sole" proprietor. I know you like to read words into a statute ... can you at least try to get it right?
Furthermore, you seem to believe that a person can pay an employee and just say "hey, I'm going to choose not to characterize what I pay him as 'wages' ... if I say he's not an 'employee' and that I'm not paying him 'wages' ... that'll work right"?
Do you really think that your say-so will work? That's kinda like the murderer saying "I know that someone who 'murders' kills another ... but I'll just tell the judge that it wasn't 'murder' because I didn't really 'kill' him ... I can choose to determine whether or not what I did was 'killing' and the judge will be bound by my self-determination."
If a statutes says "wages are all pay you receive as compensation for services" ... who do you think makes the determination that you got paid wages? Do you *honestly* think that you will be able to receive pay from an employer ... and then get to decide whether it was "wages" under the law?
No, you don't get to do that.
rachel wrote:Secondly, its stating a proprietor who is not required to file any pension returns is not obligated to get an EIN. Probably do to having no employee's or not paying "wages" as defined for Social Security purposes to one or more employee's. And thirdly, its stating a proprietor who is not required to file any excise returns is not obligated to get an EIN. Probably do to having no employee's or not paying "wages" as defined for Social Security purposes to one or more employee's.
Now, I wish you'd also read the regulations which do require an EIN. Start with 26 CFR 31.6011(b)-1. You seem to be fixated on a sole proprietor with no employees.