In which countries do high earners pay the most tax? And where do average earners pay the most?
Income tax has been a political hot potato for decades. In 1966 The Beatles released their song Taxman as a protest against the 95% "supertax" rate introduced by Harold Wilson's Labour government, which the band had to pay. The top rate of tax in the UK is less than half that now but it's still a source of controversy.
In France, President Francois Hollande's election campaign promise to tax salaries above one million euros (£830,000) at 75% was - not surprisingly - met with howls of protest by the rich, who Hollande once said he "didn't like". His policy was struck down by the courts in 2012 who ruled it unconstitutional but he amended it so that the employer became liable to pay it.
To put this in context, the football club Paris Saint-Germain have to pay nearly 35m euros (£29m) to the government on star striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic's net annual salary of 11m euros.
Tax rates do vary dramatically depending on which country you live in. The accountancy firm Price Waterhouse Coopers (PWC) has crunched the numbers for the G20 nations.
For each country, they calculated how much a high earner on a salary of $400,000 (£240,000) in 2013, with a mortgage of $1.2m (£750,000), would have left after all income tax rates and social security contributions. They assume this person is married with two children, one of them aged under six.
These are their findings. In each country, the wage earner takes home the following proportion of his or her salary.
- Italy - 50.59% (takes home $202,360 out of $400,000 salary)
- India - 54.90%
- United Kingdom - 57.28%
- France - 58.10%
- Canada - 58.13%
- Japan - 58.68%
- Australia - 59.30%
- United States - 60.45% (based on New York state tax)
- Germany - 60.61%
- South Africa - 61.78%
- China - 62.05%
- Argentina - 64.02%
- Turkey - 64.64%
- South Korea - 65.75%
- Indonesia - 69.78%
- Mexico - 70.60%
- Brazil - 73.32%
- Russia - 87%
- Saudi Arabia - 96.86% (so you take home $387,400 out of the $400,000 salary)
But one important thing to consider when comparing the top rate levels of tax is the threshold where the rate kicks in, because the differences are massive.
"In the UK, the 45% top rate of
tax kicks in at an income level of around $250,000 (£151,000) compared
to Italy where the top rate of 43% comes in at $125,000," says Ben
Wilkins, a tax partner at PWC.
Outside the G20, the Danish government taxes workers at 60% on all earnings over $60,000. Most of us can only dream of earning a salary that would attract the top rate of tax, so what about ordinary earners?
It is difficult to compare tax rates. Income tax is only one tax - most of us will pay other kinds of tax, like social security, and those with children might get some tax relief.
The statisticians at the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) have done some analysis of average salaries.
"At the top end of the distribution we have Belgium where single people pay 43% of earnings in income tax and social security contributions (or national insurance), followed by Germany with 39.9%," says Maurice Nettley, head of tax statistics at the OECD. "The lowest rates are paid in Chile at 7% and Mexico at 9.5%."
These tax rates apply to single people with no children, on an average salary for their country.
- Belgium - 42.80%
- Germany - 39.90%
- Denmark - 38.90%
- Hungary - 35%
- Austria - 34%
- Greece - 25.4%
- OECD Average - 25.10%
- UK - 24.90%
- USA - 22.70%
- New Zealand - 16.40%
- Israel - 15.50%
- Korea - 13%
- Mexico - 9.50%
- Chile - 7%
- Denmark - 34.8%
- Austria - 31.9%
- Belgium - 31.8%
- Finland - 29.4%
- Netherlands - 28.7%
- Greece 26.7%
- UK - 24.9%
- Germany - 21.3%
- OECD average - 19.6%
- USA - 10.4%
- Korea - 10.2%
- Slovak Republic - 10%
- Mexico - 9.5%
- Chile - 7%
- Czech Republic - 5.6%
Of course, the point of paying taxes is that the government is supposed to provide services for that.
"In a lot of the European countries tax rates and social
security contributions are high but the provision of benefits by the
state tends to be very generous compared to countries in other parts of
the world," says Nettley."If you fall ill or become unemployed the state will contribute and there are also generous pension arrangements."
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