Tax Freedom Day

First day of the year on which a nation as a whole has earned enough income to pay its taxes From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tax Freedom Day

Tax Freedom Day is a concept developed and trademarked by American businessman Dallas Hostetler, which aims to calculate the first day of the year on which a nation as a whole has theoretically earned enough income to pay its taxes. Every dollar that is officially considered income by the government is counted, and every payment to the government that is officially considered a tax is counted. Taxes at all levels of government – local, state and federal – are included.

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In the US, the tax burden surged in the 20th century but abated in the 21st century.[1]

History and methodology

The concept of Tax Freedom Day was developed in 1948 by Florida businessman Dallas Hostetler, who trademarked the phrase "Tax Freedom Day" and calculated it each year for the next two decades.[2] In 1971, Hostetler retired and transferred the trademark to the Tax Foundation.[3][better source needed]

United States

In the United States, the "Tax Freedom Day" is annually calculated by the Tax Foundation, a Washington, D.C.–based think tank. Their results are as follows:

More information Year ...
Tax Freedom Days in the U.S. since 1900:[4][5]
Year Tax Freedom Day Tax Burden
1900January 225.9%
1910January 195.0%
1920February 1312.0%
1930February 1211.7%
1940March 717.9%
1950March 3124.6%
1960April 1127.7%
1970April 1929.6%
1980April 2130.4%
1990April 2130.4%
2000May 133.0%
2010April 926.9%
2011April 1227.7%
2012April 1329.2%
2013April 1829.4%
2014April 2130.2%
2015April 2431.2%
2016April 2230.9%
2017April 2330.9%
2018April 1929.7%
2019April 1629.0%
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Around the world

Summarize
Perspective

Many other companies and organizations in countries throughout the world now produce their own "Tax Freedom Day" analysis. According to the Tax Foundation, Tax Freedom Day reports are currently being published in eight countries. Due to the different ways that nations collect and categorize public finance data, however, Tax Freedom Days are not necessarily directly comparable from one country to another.

More information Country, Day of year ...
Tax Freedom Days for countries by date
CountryDay of year % burdenDate of yearUpdatedSource Ref.
Switzerland12133%May 12015Deloitte[6]
India7420%March 142000Centre for Civil Society[7]
Australia11029%April 202024Centre for Independent Studies[8][9]
United States11431%April 242015Tax Foundation[10]
Estonia11431%April 242007Eesti Maksumaksjate Liit (Estonian Taxpayers Association)[11]
Lithuania12835%May 152015Lithuanian Free Market Institute[12]
Spain18150%June 302016Foundation for the Advancement of Liberty and Spanish Taxpayers' Union[13]
Uruguay13339%May 132010CPA Ferrere[14]
Hungary14038%*May 202008Hungarian Central Statistic Institute[15]
New Zealand12735%*May 72018Staples Rodway[16][17]
South Africa14139%May 222014Free Market Foundation[18]
Bulgaria12436%May 42018Radio Bulgaria[19]
United Kingdom16141%June 102024Adam Smith Institute[20][21]
Brazil15341%May 312014Instituto Brasileiro de Planejamento Tributario[22]
Slovakia15542%June 52017Nadácia F.A.Hayeka[23]
Canada16445%June 142019Fraser Institute[24]
Belarus13537%May 152016The Public Association «Discussion and Analytical Society Liberal Club»[25]
Croatia16144%June 102010Adriatic Institute for Public Policy[26]
Czech Republic16244%June 62024Liberální institut[27]
Slovenia16437%June 132015Svetilnik[28]
Belgium21854%August 62018Institut économique Molinari (IEM)[29]
Greece16946%June 192012Φορολογικό Παρατηρητήριο, Κέντρο Φιλελεύθερων Μελετών – Μάρκος Δραγούμης[30]
Poland15643%June 62018Centrum im. Adama Smitha[31]
Germany19252%July 112015Bund der Steuerzahler[32]
Israel19754%July 142013Jerusalem Institute for Market Studies[33]
Turkey19453%July 142012Liberal Democratic Party[34]
Norway21057%July 292007Skattebetalerforeningen[35]
France20857%July 272018Institut économique Molinari (IEM)[36]
Bosnia and Herzegovina16144%June 102017Centre for Policy and Governance «Centar za politike i upravljanje»[37]
Austria21659%August 52019Austrian Economics Center[38]
Italy15342%June 22018CGIA[39]
Mexico 177 48.6% June 25 2024 Caminos de la Libertad [40]
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European Union

A 2010 study published in L'Anglophone,[41] a Brussels newspaper, compared the tax burdens of "Average Joes" in each of the 27 EU member states and projected the Tax Freedom Day for workers earning a typical wage. Income taxes, social security contributions (by the employee and the employer) and projected VAT contributions were included in the calculations.

Regarding the discrepancy between their calculation of August 3 as the typical Belgian worker's Tax Freedom Day and that of PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PWC), L'Anglophone's authors wrote:[42]

[PWC's] figures count revenue from all taxes (including those on corporate profits, petrol, cigarettes, &c.) and thus present a more complete picture of the country’s total tax burden," adding that it is "an average applied to all Belgians – not all Belgian workers; in 2008, less than half of Belgium’s population (4.99 million working out of 10.67 million citizens) was legally working. Consequently, a huge share of Belgium’s tax burden is borne by the working population.

More information Country, Day of year ...
2010 Tax Freedom Days for the "Average Joe" in the European Union, as published in L'Anglophone
CountryDay of year % burdenDate of year
Austria19152%July 10
Belgium21559%August 3
Bulgaria14540%May 25
Cyprus7219%March 13
Czech Rep.16545%June 14
Denmark16846%June 17
Estonia15041%May 30
Finland16645%June 15
France20756%July 26
Germany20055%July 19
Greece16445%June 13
Hungary21859%August 6
Ireland11732%April 27
Italy16946%June 18
Latvia16144%June 10
Lithuania16745%May 20
Luxembourg13537%May 15
Malta9927%April 9
Netherlands18450%July 3
Poland16044%June 9
Portugal15041%May 30
Romania17849%June 27
Slovakia16746%June 16
Slovenia16445%June 13
Spain13637%May 16
Sweden18149%June 30
United Kingdom13436%May 13
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Criticism

Summarize
Perspective

In the book Filthy Lucre: Economics for People Who Hate Capitalism, philosopher Joseph Heath criticizes the idea that tax-paying is inherently different from consumption:

It would make just as much sense to declare an annual "mortgage freedom day", in order to let mortgage owners know what day they "stop working for the bank and start working for themselves". ...But who cares? Homeowners are not really "working for the bank"; they're merely financing their own consumption. After all, they're the ones living in the house, not the bank manager.[43]

Mathematical

For Canada, the Fraser Institute also includes a "Personal Tax Freedom Day Calculator" that estimates a customized Tax Freedom Day based on additional variables such as age of household head, sex of household head, marital status and number of children. However, the Fraser Institute's figures have been disputed. For example, a 2005 study by Osgoode Hall Law Professor Neil Brooks[44] argued that the Fraser Institute's Tax Freedom Day analysis includes flawed accounting, including the exclusion of several important forms of income and overstating tax figures, moving the date nearly two months later.[45]

In America, while Tax Freedom Day presents an "average American" tax burden, it is not a tax burden typical for an American. That is, the tax burdens of most Americans are substantially overstated by Tax Freedom Day. The larger tax bills associated with higher incomes increases the average tax burden above that of most Americans.

The Tax Foundation defends its methodology by pointing out that Tax Freedom Day is the U.S. economy's overall average tax burden—not the tax burden of the "average" American, which is how it is often misinterpreted by members of the media.[46] Tax Foundation materials do not use the phrase "tax burden of the average American", although members of the media often make this mistake.[47]

Another criticism is that the calculation includes capital gains taxes but not capital gains income, thus overstating the tax burden. For example, in the late 1990s the US Tax Freedom Day moved later, reaching its latest date ever in 2000, but this was largely due to capital gains taxes on the bull market of that era rather than an increase in tax rates. In other words, variations in capital gains income and their associated taxes cause changes in the amount of taxes, but not in the income used in the calculation of Tax Freedom Day.

The Tax Foundation argues that the Tax Freedom Day calculation does not include capital gains as income because it uses income and tax data directly from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). BEA has never counted capital gains as income since they don't represent current production available to pay taxes, and so the Tax Foundation excludes them as well. Additionally, the Tax Foundation argues that the exclusion of capital gains income is irrelevant in most years since including capital gains would only shift Tax Freedom Day by 1 percent in either direction in most years.[48] A 1 percent change would represent 3.65 days. From 1968 to 2019 the date has never left the 21-day range of April 13 to May 3.

See also

Notes

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