Taxing Wages 2021
This annual publication provides details of taxes paid on wages in OECD countries. It covers personal income taxes and social security contributions paid by employees, social security contributions and payroll taxes paid by employers, and cash benefits received by workers. It illustrates how these taxes and benefits are calculated in each member country and examines how they impact household incomes. The results also enable quantitative cross-country comparisons of labour cost levels and the overall tax and benefit position of single persons and families on different levels of earnings. The publication shows average and marginal effective tax rates on labour costs for eight different household types, which vary by income level and household composition (single persons, single parents, one or two earner couples with or without children). The average tax rates measure the part of gross wage earnings or labour costs taken in tax and social security contributions, both before and after cash benefits, and the marginal tax rates the part of a small increase of gross earnings or labour costs that is paid in these levies.
Taxing Wages 2021 includes a special feature entitled: “Impact of COVID-19 on the Tax Wedge in OECD Countries”.
Also available in: French
Executive Summary
In 2020, the OECD average tax wedge for the single worker earning the average wage was 34.6%, a decrease of 0.39 percentage points from 2019, reflecting the initial impact of the COVID-19 crisis on both wages and labour tax systems. In the period covered by Taxing Wages (2000-2020), the largest decreases in the OECD tax wedge for the average worker without children are observed in 2008 (0.48 percentage points) and in 2009 (0.52 percentage points), in the context of the Global Financial Crisis.
Also available in: French
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