Social Security is social construction.
It is a system of social benefits that gives a benefit to the state for the benefit of the beneficiaries of the system.
Social Security, which began in 1935 as a government program to help working people, is a federal program that was privatized in 1972.
The system has become so complicated that it has been called the Social Security of the 21st Century.
The program was meant to be the backbone of the federal government and provide for people’s retirement benefits and health care.
In the last 40 years, however, Social Security has become a political construct.
Social Security benefits are not indexed to inflation, which makes it impossible for the program to cover its costs.
Social security benefits have not been indexed since the late 1990s.
The Social Security Administration has said the program should be indexed to a basket of inflation-adjusted amounts that are known as “cost-of-living adjustments” (COLAs), so the federal payroll tax is not affected by inflation.
The U.S. Social Services Administration said in a statement that it is “confident that the COLAs will continue to reflect current market values for the years 2020 through 2026.”
The program is funded through payroll taxes.
The government receives the payroll tax from the government employees who receive the benefits.
The COLAs are set by Congress, not the Social Services and Medicare programs, which are run by the states and do not get a penny of the payroll taxes paid to the federal governments.
This means that the states have an incentive to lower their Social Security taxes and not raise them for the federal program.
The system is so complicated and the system is such a political construction, that it’s difficult to understand how the COLA system works, said Jim Karp, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former senior official in the Social Protection Administration.
The U.K. government paid $4.9 billion in COLAs in 2016.
The current COLA is $1,842 for married couples with a taxable income of more than $118,000 a year.
The federal government pays $1.8 billion in Social Security and Medicare COLAs for married people who have taxable incomes of less than $75,000 per year.
The United States government pays an annual Social Security payroll tax of about $7 billion.
The average federal COLA for a married couple is $8,500, according to the Social Labor Department.
The federal government does not have to pay any Social Security COLA on the amount of the Social security benefit.
The IRS collects the payroll-tax tax from those people.
The COLAs, however are not tax-deductible.