Tax revenues are a crucial means for governments to fund public services such as healthcare and education, but tax rates differ widely across Europe.
One way to compare fiscal approaches is to look at the levels of tax revenue as a share of national output (GDP).
According to Eurostat, the overall tax-to-GDP ratio in the EU was 40.0% in 2023, but which countries emerge as outliers across Europe?
When looking at the EU, the UK, Turkey, and EFTA countries, the ratio ranges from 22.7% in Ireland to 45.6% in France.
At the top of the ranking, Belgium (44.8%), Denmark (44.7%), and Austria (43.5%) closely follow France. With the exception of Iceland, the other Nordic countries also record high tax-to-GDP ratios, with Finland, Sweden and Norway recording scores of 42.7%, 42.6%, and 41.8%, respectively.
Luxembourg (41.9%), Italy (41.7%), Greece (40.7%), and Germany (40.3%) are also positioned above the EU average.
Tax revenue, including social contributions, is below 30% of GDP in Turkey (23.5%), Switzerland (26.9%), Malta (27.1%), Romania (27.3%), and Bulgaria (29.9%).
Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Czechia, Hungary, and Slovakia rank above the lowest group, though their ratios are still comparatively modest, around 32% to 35%.
Among Europe’s five largest economies, the UK has the lowest tax-to-GDP ratio at 35.3%, followed by Spain at 37.0%. The other three — Germany, France, and Italy — are all above the EU average.
The data for the UK and Turkey come from the OECD, which is not directly comparable with Eurostat figures as methodological differences can lead to slight discrepancies.
Tax Foundation Europe policy analyst Alexander Mengden noted that Ireland, Turkey, and Switzerland all tell three different stories as to why tax-to-GDP ratios diverge across OECD countries.
“Ireland often stands out as an outlier in GDP-based comparisons because of its exceptionally high levels of foreign direct investment, attracted in part by its low 12.5% corporate tax rate,” he told Euronews Business. This disproportionately affects GDP relative to other economic indicators.
He explained that for a worker earning the average wage, Ireland’s employment tax burden is only slightly above the OECD average.
Recalling that Ireland’s GDP growth exceeded 20% in 2015, driven by tech giant Apple transferring its intellectual property assets to Ireland, Dr. Tom McDonnell, co-director of the Nevin Economic Research Institute, explained: “Irish economists adjust for these ‘globalisation’ distortions by using a bespoke measure of output called GNI, which better reflects actual economic activity in Ireland.”
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