FACTOID # 4: Tax makes up half of the of Gross Domestic Product in Denmark and Sweden. In Japan and the United States, it makes up less than 30%.
 
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Taxation Statistics > Contribution by richest 30% (most recent) by country

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Rank   Countries  Amount  (top to bottom)   
#1   France: 67.9% 
#2   Ireland: 66.4% 
#3   United States: 65.3% 
#4   Australia: 65.1% 
#5   Belgium: 63.5% 
#6   Italy: 62.3% 
#7   United Kingdom: 62% 
#8   Canada: 60.4% 
#9   Finland: 56.8% 
#10   Norway: 53.8% 
#11   Germany: 53.6% 
#12   Sweden: 53.3% 
#13   Netherlands: 52.2% 
#14   Denmark: 48.7% 
Weighted average: 59.4%  


DEFINITION: Proportion of taxes paid by the broad income group - richest 30% (Data is for mid-1990s). Taxes include all direct income taxes, including employee social security contributions. Income groups were built on the basis of final disposable adjusted income.

SOURCE: Michael F. Forster, 'Trends and Driving Factors in Income Distribution and Poverty in the OECD Area', OECD Labour Market and Social Policy Occasional Paper 42

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COMMENTARY     

Ian Graham
Staff Editor

7th April 2005
The average tax contribution by the richest 30 percent of income earners in the 14 countries on this list is 62.47 percent. Tax contributed by the poorest 30 percent of income earners is about 7.17 percent. So the rich contribute approximately 8 times as much tax revenue as the poor.

The richest 20 percent in these countries earn an average of 39 percent of the income. The poorest 20 percent earn about 7.85 percent of the income, or about one-fifth as much.

The biggest income disparity is in the United States, where the top 20 percent earn 46.5 percent of the income, while the poorest 20 percent earn 5.2 percent, about 11 percent as much.

In Denmark, the poorest 20 percent earned 9.6 percent of the income, almost 28 percent of the share earned by the richest 20 percent (34.5 percent).

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