Tax Freedom Day

Tax Freedom Day is the first day of the year in which a nation as a whole has earned enough money to pay for its annual tax burden or cost of government. The concept was introduced by the Tax Foundation—a Washington D.C.-based tax research group—as a tool for illustrating the proportion of national income that goes to pay the annual cost of government.

Canada

In 2003 Tax Freedom Day in Canada was reported as June 28 by the pro-market think tank the Frasier Institute. Tax Freedom Day in Canada reached its latest date in 2000 when it fell on July 2 after a rapid plunge to June 25 in 2001 it has steadily increased since then. The changes in the date of Tax Freedom Day generally have little to do with government policy and instead are a reflection of the state of the economy. When the nation is prosperous more Canadians are paying taxes and paying them at a higher rate, pushing Tax Freedom Day forward.

Denmark

In Denmark, Tax Freedom Day for 2001 was August 14.

United States

In the United States, Tax Freedom Day for 2003 was April 19, the earliest since 1992. The latest that Tax Freedom Day has occurred is April 30 in 2000. In the 20th century, Tax Freedom Day came as early as January 18 (in 1912). It has steadily moved later into the year, which means that the average net tax burden has increased. Tax Freedom Day differs from state to state, as American states charge a variety of state taxes and charges. In 2001, Alaskans had the slightest tax burden, earning enough to pay all their tax obligations by April 16. Connecticut had by far the heaviest tax burden—Tax Freedom Day there came on May 25. New Yorkers had the second heaviest tax burden, having to work until May 14 to pay their taxes. According to the Tax Foundation, here is the list of Tax Freedom Days in the U.S. since 1990:
  1990  20-Apr    1997  26-Apr  1991  19-Apr    1998  27-Apr  1992  19-Apr    1999  28-Apr  1993  20-Apr    2000  30-Apr  1994  21-Apr    2001  27-Apr  1995  23-Apr    2002  19-Apr  1996  24-Apr    2003  19-Apr 

Criticisms

Critics of the concept argue that the methodology used exaggerates the amount of tax paid by middle-income taxpayers, as it is calculated, essentially, by dividing total tax collections by net national product, which is skewed upward by the inclusion of very wealthy taxpayers. Another criticism is that the calculation includes capital gains taxes but not capital gains income, thus overstating the tax burden. However, the Tax Foundation defends its methodology by pointing out that (1) Tax Freedom Day is the nation's average tax burden, and if high-income taxpayers were excluded it would no longer be the mathematical average burden, and (2) the Tax Freedom Day calculation employs income and tax data directly from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) and the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) which have never counted capital gains as income since they don't represent current production that's available to pay taxes, but instead represent the re-valuing and shifting-around of existing assets. Additionally, the latter criticism is irrelevant in most years since including capital gains taxes typically shifts Tax Freedom Day by roughly 1 percent. See also: income tax

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