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Cost of living

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Possible Answers:

RENT.

Last seen on: Daily Boston Globe Crossword Sunday, 28 May 2023

Random information on the term “Cost of living”:

Bowles–Simpson Commission

2007–2008 financial crisis

2013 budget sequestration

In the United States, Social Security is the commonly used term for the federal Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI) program and is administered by the Social Security Administration (SSA). The original Social Security Act was enacted in 1935, and the current version of the Act, as amended, encompasses several social welfare and social insurance programs.

The average monthly Social Security benefit for November 2022 was $1,551. The total cost of the Social Security program for the year 2021 was $1.145 trillion or about 5 percent of U.S. GDP.

Social Security is funded primarily through payroll taxes called Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) or Self Employed Contributions Act (SECA). Wage and salary earnings in covered employment, up to an amount specifically determined by law (see tax rate table below), are subject to the Social Security payroll tax. Wage and salary earnings above this amount are not taxed. In 2022, the maximum amount of taxable earnings is $147,000.

Cost of living on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “RENT”:

The Pulitzer Prize for Drama is one of the seven American Pulitzer Prizes that are annually awarded for Letters, Drama, and Music. It is one of the original Pulitzers, for the program was inaugurated in 1917 with seven prizes, four of which were awarded that year. (No Drama prize was given, however, so that one was inaugurated in 1918, in a sense.) It recognizes a theatrical work staged in the U.S. during the preceding calendar year.

Until 2007, eligibility for the Drama Prize ran from March 1 to March 2 to reflect the Broadway “season” rather than the calendar year that governed most other Pulitzer Prizes.

The drama jury, which consists of one academic and four critics, attends plays in New York and in regional theaters. The Pulitzer board can overrule the jury’s choice; in 1986, the board’s opposition to the jury’s choice of the CIVIL warS resulted in no award being given.

In 1955 Joseph Pulitzer, Jr. pressured the prize jury into presenting the Prize to Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, which the jury considered the weakest of the five shortlisted nominees (“amateurishly constructed… from the stylistic points of view annoyingly pretentious”), instead of Clifford Odets’ The Flowering Peach (their preferred choice) or The Bad Seed, their second choice. Edward Albee’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? was selected for the 1963 Pulitzer Prize for Drama by that award’s committee. However, the committee’s selection was overruled by the award’s advisory board, the trustees of Columbia University, because of the play’s then-controversial use of profanity and sexual themes. Had Albee been awarded, he would be tied with Eugene O’Neill for the most Pulitzer Prizes for Drama (four).

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