Under the yearly cycle of economic policy coordination set up by the European Commission (the ‘European Semester’), the Annual Growth Survey makes the following recommendations for ‘growth friendly’ tax reforms:
Under the yearly cycle of economic policy coordination set up by the European Commission (the ‘European Semester’), the Annual Growth Survey makes the following recommendations for ‘growth friendly’ tax reforms:
Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union, has published a report on the taxation trends in the EU. The report finds that that overall tax-to-GDP ratio has gone up from 38% in 2011 to 39.4% in 2012. The tax burden varies significantly between member states ranging from less than 30% of GDP in Lithuania, to 35.8% in the UK (representing a fall of 0.4% since 2011), 45% in France and 48.1% in Denmark.
The largest source of tax revenue in the EU remains labour taxes, representing more than half of total receipts in 2012 (51%), followed by consumption taxes (28.5%) and taxes on capital (20.8%).
Under the yearly cycle of economic policy coordination set up by the European Commission (the ‘European Semester’), the Annual Growth Survey makes the following recommendations for ‘growth friendly’ tax reforms:
Under the yearly cycle of economic policy coordination set up by the European Commission (the ‘European Semester’), the Annual Growth Survey makes the following recommendations for ‘growth friendly’ tax reforms:
Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union, has published a report on the taxation trends in the EU. The report finds that that overall tax-to-GDP ratio has gone up from 38% in 2011 to 39.4% in 2012. The tax burden varies significantly between member states ranging from less than 30% of GDP in Lithuania, to 35.8% in the UK (representing a fall of 0.4% since 2011), 45% in France and 48.1% in Denmark.
The largest source of tax revenue in the EU remains labour taxes, representing more than half of total receipts in 2012 (51%), followed by consumption taxes (28.5%) and taxes on capital (20.8%).