Date First Employed Monthly Salary $ 6,000 Monthly Income Tax Withheld Employee Arnett Nov. 16 $1,132 Cruz Jan. 2 4,600 798 Edwards Oct. 1 8,200 1,632 Harvin Dec. 1 5,900 1,052 Nicks Feb. 1 12,000 2,820 Shiancoe Mar. 1 11,300 2,533 Ward Nov. 16 4,700 788 Instructions 1. Compute the amounts to be reported for the year on each employee's Wage and Tax Statement (Form W-2), arranging the data as follows. Round all amounts to the nearest cent. Gross Federal Income Social Security Tax Withheld Medicare Employee Earnings Tax Withheld Tax Withheld 2. Compute the following employer payroll taxes for the year: (a) social security, (b) Medicare, (c) state unemployment compensation at 5.4% on the first $10,000 of each employee's earnings, (d) federal unemployment compensation at 0.8% on the first $10,000 of each employee's earnings, and (e) total. Round all amounts to the nearest cent.
Ehrlich Co. began business on January 2. Salaries were paid to employees on the last day of each month, and social security tax, Medicare tax, and federal income tax were withheld in the required amounts. An employee who is hired in the middle of the month receives half the monthly salary for that month. All required payroll tax reports were filed, and the correct
amount of payroll taxes was remitted by the company for the calendar year. Early in the following year, before the Wage and Tax Statements (Form W-2) could be prepared for distribution to employees and for filing with the Social Security Administration, the employees’ earnings records were inadvertently destroyed. None of the employees resigned or were discharged during the year, and there were no changes in salary rates. The social security tax was withheld at the rate of 6.0% and Medicare
tax at the rate of 1.5% on salary. Data on dates of employment, salary rates, and employees’ income taxes withheld, which are summarized as follows, were obtained from personnel records and payroll records
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