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In OECD Comparison of Wage Taxes, U.S. Ranking Would Slip Badly if 2001 Tax Cuts Expired

7 min readBy: Chris Atkins

Download Fiscal Fact No. 89

Fiscal Fact No. 89

I. Introduction
When U.S. lawmakers enacted personal income taxA tax is a mandatory payment or charge collected by local, state, and national governments from individuals or businesses to cover the costs of general government services, goods, and activities. cuts across the board in 2001, they were part of a larger, worldwide tax-cutting trend that continues to the present. Last year, Iceland instituted an individual flat taxAn income tax is referred to as a “flat tax” when all taxable income is subject to the same tax rate, regardless of income level or assets. of 23.75 percent of income, which will fall to 22.75 percent this year.1 In August of this year, lawmakers in the Czech Republic will vote on a plan that will swap the current income tax system, with rates ranging from 12 to 32 percent, in favor of a system that taxes income at a single rate of 15 percent.2

Tax rate information is most current and available for the 30 nations that form the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), which includes most of the United States’ major economic competitors. The tax-cutting trend in these nations has mostly kept pace with the Bush tax-cutting pace here. Thus, while the U.S. has improved its competitive position on wage taxes between 2000 and 2006, other countries are improving their rankings as well.

If the Congress now imposes a surtaxA surtax is an additional tax levied on top of an already existing business or individual tax and can have a flat or progressive rate structure. Surtaxes are typically enacted to fund a specific program or initiative, whereas revenue from broader-based taxes, like the individual income tax, typically cover a multitude of programs and services. on wages above a certain amount—$100,000 in some plans—as part of an AMT fix, and then in four years, the 2001 rate cuts are allowed to expire, the U.S. will jump considerably in the rankings among OECD nations, erasing all positive movement in those rankings since 2000 and leaving us worse off than we were before the 2001 tax cuts. This will certainly harm the competitiveness of American businesses in the international marketplace.

II. A Comparison of Top Marginal Combined Individual Income TaxAn individual income tax (or personal income tax) is levied on the wages, salaries, investments, or other forms of income an individual or household earns. The U.S. imposes a progressive income tax where rates increase with income. The Federal Income Tax was established in 1913 with the ratification of the 16th Amendment. Though barely 100 years old, individual income taxes are the largest source of tax revenue in the U.S. Rates in the OECD
Table 1 shows the top marginal combined individual income tax rates for all 30 countries in the OECD in 2006 and 2000. The rates in 2006 ranged from a high of 59.74 percent in Denmark to a low of 19 percent in the Slovak Republic. The average top rate in 2006 was 42.95 percent, with seventeen countries levying rates lower than average and thirteen countries levying rates higher than average.

Table 1
Top Marginal Combined Individual Income Tax Rates in the OECD
2000 and 2006

Country

Top Combined Marginal Individual Income Tax Rate in 2000a

Rank

Top Combined Marginal Individual Income Tax Rate in 2006a

Rank

Percentage Reduction in Marginal Rate
(2000-2006)

Denmark

59.70%

3

59.74%

1

0.06%

Sweden

55.38%

4

56.60%

2

2.20%

France

53.25%

6

55.85%

3

4.88%

Belgium

63.90%

1

53.50%

4

-16.27%

Netherlands

60.00%

2

52.00%

5

-13.33%

Finland

48.67%

8

50.90%

6

4.58%

Austria

45.00%

17

50.00%

7

11.11%

Japan

50.00%

7

50.00%

7

0.00%

Australia

48.50%

9

48.50%

9

0.00%

Canada

46.41%

13

46.41%

10

0.00%

Germany

53.81%

5

45.37%

11

-15.67%

Spain

48.00%

10

45.00%

12

-6.25%

Italy

46.40%

14

44.10%

13

-4.96%

Switzerland

43.23%

21

42.06%

14

-2.71%

Portugal

35.00%

28

42.00%

15

20.00%

Ireland

44.00%

20

42.00%

16

-4.55%

Poland

40.00%

23

40.00%

17

0.00%

Greece

45.00%

18

40.00%

18

-11.11%

United Kingdom

40.00%

24

40.00%

19

0.00%

Norway

47.50%

11

40.00%

20

-15.79%

United Statesb

46.09%

15

39.76%

21

-13.74%

New Zealand

39.00%

26

39.00%

22

0.00%

Luxembourg

47.15%

12

38.95%

23

-17.39%

Korea

44.00%

19

38.50%

24

-12.50%

Iceland

45.37%

16

36.72%

25

-19.07%

Hungary

40.00%

25

36.00%

26

-10.00%

Turkey

35.60%

27

35.60%

27

0.00%

Czech Republic

32.00%

30

32.00%

28

0.00%

Mexico

40.00%

22

29.00%

29

-27.50%

Slovak Republic

35.00%

29

19.00%

30

-45.71%

Average

45.93%

42.95%

-6.46%

a) From OECD, Table I.4, “Top marginal personal income tax rates for employees”
b) Since a combined federal and state rate is presented, the U.S. rate is adjusted to account for the deductibility of state and local taxes. The U.S. is the only OECD country that allows the state and local tax deductionA tax deduction is a provision that reduces taxable income. A standard deduction is a single deduction at a fixed amount. Itemized deductions are popular among higher-income taxpayers who often have significant deductible expenses, such as state and local taxes paid, mortgage interest, and charitable contributions. . In 2000, we assume that 80 percent of the state and local tax deduction was clawed back by Pease. In 2006, we assume that less than 20 percent of the state and local tax deduction was clawed back by Pease.
Source: Tax Foundation calculations based on statistics from the OECD

Since 2000, more than half the countries in the OECD have lowered their top marginal rates, reducing the OECD average rate from 45.93 to 42.95 percent. The biggest movers in either direction between 2000 and 2006 were Portugal, which jumped thirteen places after increasing its top rate by 20 percent, and Luxembourg, which dropped eleven places after cutting its top rate by over 17 percent.

The U.S. reduced its top rate by over 13 percent between 2000 and 2006, dropping it from 15th to 21st in the rankings. If no other country had reduced its tax rates, the U.S. would stand at 26th highest, but the strong tax-cutting trend in other OECD countries blunted the impact of the 2001 rate cuts.

III. Future Movement in the U.S.’s Ranking and the Economic Consequences
With lawmakers in the House and Senate approving budget resolutions that assume the expiration of the 2001 tax increases in 2011,3 and others talking about surtaxes for wealthy taxpayers as part of AMT reform,4 it is useful for lawmakers to consider the international ramifications. The rest of the world is still cutting rates while we anticipate tax hikes.

Full repeal of the 2001 rate cuts after a surcharge to fix AMT would move the U.S. from 21st to 9th highest in the rankings (see Table 2), and that assumes the tax cutting abroad comes to a halt. A repeal of the 2001 tax cuts with no AMT surcharge would move the U.S. to 11th highest, while an AMT surcharge alone would move the U.S. to 14th highest. In all three cases, the U.S. would rank higher than it did in 2000 (15th), before the passage of the 2001 tax cuts.

Table 2
Repeal of 2001 Tax Cuts and AMT Fix Could Give U.S. 9th Highest Individual Income Tax Rate in OECD

Policy Change

Top Marginal Combined Ratea

OECD Ranking

Change in Ranking

None (keep current system)

39.16%

21

n/a

Repeal of 2001 Tax Cutsb

45.49%

11

+10

4% Surcharge on Top Rate to Fix AMTc

43.76%

14

+7

Repeal of 2001 Tax Cuts and 4% Surcharge on Top Rate to Fix AMTd

49.49%

9

+12

a) Federal rate plus state rate, adjusted for deductibility of state taxes from federal taxes
b) The 2001 tax cuts are repealed on January 1, 2011, restoring the tax rates to pre-2001 level; furthermore, top-rate taxpayers will only be able to take 20 percent of the state and local tax deduction from 2011 onward. The rate presented takes these factors into account.
c) The 4% surcharge will be levied on adjusted gross income (AGI), which means that it will not be offset by state and local taxes.
d) See notes b and c.
Source: Tax Foundation calculations based on data from the OECD.

The economic consequences of this jump in the rankings will almost certainly be negative, especially when coupled with the fact that the U.S. currently has the second-highest combined corporate income taxA corporate income tax (CIT) is levied by federal and state governments on business profits. Many companies are not subject to the CIT because they are taxed as pass-through businesses, with income reportable under the individual income tax. rate in the OECD.5 A high individual income tax rate will stunt our economic growth by increasing the cost of employing labor in the U.S., impeding entrepreneurship and innovation,6 and harming the international competitiveness of many small and medium-sized U.S. businesses. These firms are organized not as large publicly held corporations but as S-Corps, Limited Liability Corporations and other forms that pay tax through the individual income tax system. These higher business taxes will ultimately reduce their return on investment, lower the wages of their U.S. workers and increase the prices of their products.

IV. Conclusion
The 2001 tax cuts that lowered U.S. individual income tax rates were part of the broader tax-cutting trends in the OECD from 2000 to 2006, and they succeeded in dropping the U.S. from 15th to 21st in the OECD rankings on marginal income tax rates. If lawmakers in Congress impose a surcharge as part of AMT reform and allow the 2001 tax cuts to expire, the U.S. will jump to 9th in the rankings. This will not only reverse the positive economic benefits from the 2001 tax rate reductions but will also harm the international competitiveness of our individual income tax system.

Notes

1. See Iceland Ministry of Finance, “Principal tax rates 2006,” located at http://eng.fjarmalaraduneyti.is/media/Taxes/Principal_tax_rates_2006.pdf.

2. See “Report: Czech Gov’t to Propose Flat Tax,” International Business Times (March 26, 2007), located at http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/20070326/czech-tax-reform.htm; “Thousands of Czech Labor Union Members Protest Proposed Tax Reform, Cuts in Welfare Spending,” International Herald Tribune-Europe (June 23, 2007), located at http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/06/23/europe/EU-GEN-Czech-Labor-Union-Protest.php.

3. See Brian Riedl, Budget Resolution Calls for Massive Tax Hikes and Spending Increases, Heritage Foundation WebMemo #1460 (May 17, 2007), located at http://www.heritage.org/Research/Budget/wm1460.cfm.

4. See Len Burman and Greg Leiserson, A Simple, Progressive Replacement for the AMT, Tax Policy Center, located at http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/newsevents/simpletax.cfm.

5. See Chris Atkins and Scott Hodge, “U.S. Lagging Behind OECD Corporate Tax Trends,” Tax Foundation Fiscal Fact, No. 55 (May 2006), located at http://www.taxfoundation.org/legacy/show/1466.html. .

6. See William Gentry and Glenn Hubbard, ‘Success Taxes,’ Entrepreneurial Entry, and Innovation, NBER Working Paper No. 10551 (June 2004) (finding that the level of the marginal tax rateThe marginal tax rate is the amount of additional tax paid for every additional dollar earned as income. The average tax rate is the total tax paid divided by total income earned. A 10 percent marginal tax rate means that 10 cents of every next dollar earned would be taken as tax. has a negative effect in entrepreneurial activity).

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