UPDATED. 2024-04-26 16:15 (금)
한국 미혼자,소득 비해 세금 적다
한국 미혼자,소득 비해 세금 적다
  • jcy
  • 승인 2010.05.14 14:06
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OECD 회원국 중 최하위권...OECD 발표
   
 
 
한국의 평균 조세 부담률이 경제협력개발기구(OECD) 회원국 중 낮은 수준인 것으로 나타났다.

OECD가 14일 발표한 2008-2009 조세부담 보고서에 따르면 지난해 한국 미혼자의 평균 소득 대비 세금 부담률은 19.7%였다.
30개 OECD 회원국 중 멕시코(15.3%), 뉴질랜드(18.4%)에 이어 세번째로 낮았다.

OECD 평균이 36.4%라는 점을 감안하면, 한국 미혼 직장인의 조세부담률이 절반가량 낮은 셈이다.

자녀 2명을 가진 기혼부부의 조세부담률은 한국이 17.2%로 OECD 회원국 중 8번째로 낮았다.

뉴질랜드가 0.6%로 가장 낮았고 아이슬란드(8.6%) 룩셈부르크(11.2%) 아일랜드(11.7%) 미국(13.7%) 호주(14.1%) 멕시코(15.3%) 스위스.한국(17.2%) 순이었다. OECD 평균은 26.0%였다.

OECD는 총평에서 "지난해 글로벌 경제위기로 전반적인 경기가 위축되면서 조세부담률도 다소 줄어든 추세"라면서 "한국은 OECD 국가 중 조세부담률이 낮은 국가의 하나"라고 밝혔다.

이어 "한국의 경우 미혼이나 자녀를 가진 부부에 상관없이 OECD 평균보다 조세부담률이 낮다"면서 "한국은 소득 증가와 함께 조세부담률도 증가하는 추세지만, 여전히 다른 국가보다는 많이 낮은 수준"이라고 분석했다.

..............다음은 원문.............

Tax : Average tax burden on workers’ earnings fell in most OECD countries last year
Send Print 11/05/2010 - Average tax and social security burdens on employment incomes fell slightly in 24 out of 30 OECD countries last year as governments struggled to shore up faltering economies amid the worst recession in decades. But whether this trend will continue this year is uncertain given the widespread pressures on public budgets.

“Governments have to reconcile support to a still fragile recovery with the need to move to a more sustainable fiscal path”, OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría said. “Lower taxes on labour can help to boost recovery, but only as part of a broader, balanced package.”


According to the latest edition of the OECD’s annual publication Taxing Wages, some of the biggest falls were in New Zealand, which already imposed relatively low taxes on labour incomes. Turkey and Sweden were among other countries experiencing significant reductions.


Taxes on wages, including both employer and employee social security contributions, are a key factor in companies’ hiring decisions and individuals’ attitudes to work. As such, they indirectly affect employment trends.


Taxing Wages calculates the difference between the total cost to an employer of employing someone and that person’s net take-home pay, including any cash benefits from government welfare programmes, to define what it calls the ‘tax wedge’. The tax burden at any given level of earnings is derived by dividing this ‘tax wedge’ by the total payroll costs. The Taxing Wages publication provides an overview of the taxation of employment income across OECD countries and the distribution of this tax burden across different household types and levels of earnings.



In 2009, Taxing Wages indicates
• Many countries cut income taxes, especially for lower-income households and/or households with children, thereby reducing tax wedges. Some countries also reduced employer social security contributions to encourage firms to retain employees, rather than resorting to lay-offs.


• Smaller tax wedges also reflected lower average wages in some countries as a result of the financial and economic crisis, and the progressivity of tax regimes, so that lower earnings meant a smaller share was taken in tax. This was especially the case in Germany, Japan and the United States.


• Hungary, Greece and France were the highest-tax countries for one-earner married couples with two children earning the average wage, with tax wedges of 43.7% in Hungary and 41.7% in Greece and France. (See Table 1)



• At the bottom end of the scale, New Zealand had the smallest tax wedge for one-earner married couples with 2 children earning the average wage, at 0.6%, followed by Iceland (8.6%) Luxembourg (11.2%). The average for OECD countries was 26%.



• Belgium, Hungary and Germany once again had the highest tax wedges for single workers without children on average wages, at 55.2%, 53.4% and 50.9% respectively, though all three countries showed a small drop from in 2008. (See Table 2)



• At the other end of the scale, Mexico took only 15.3% of the payroll cost of a single person without children on average wages in taxes. In New Zealand, the figure was 18.4% and in Korea it was 19.7%. The average for OECD countries was 36.4%.


• In Turkey, lower employer social security charges led to a 2.29 percentage point reduction in the tax wedge for a single person on the average wage, while in Sweden, cuts in both income taxes and employer social security charges led to a 1.65 percentage point reduction.


• Australia, Austria, Germany, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, the Slovak Republic, Turkey and the United Kingdom all reduced the tax wedge for single parents with 2 children earning two thirds of the average wage by more than 2 percentage points.


• Ireland increased the tax wedge on average-income single earners by 1.54 percentage points and on one-earner average income married couples with two children by two percentage points as part of a drive to raise more tax revenues. Even so, the tax wedge remained below the OECD average in both cases, at 28.6% and 11.7% respectively.


• In Australia, Iceland, Italy, Mexico, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland and the Slovak Republic, a large additional burden on employment are payments which are compulsory but which are not regarded as tax since they are not paid to government but to privately-managed pension funds or insurance companies. Often, these are paid by the employer, but in Iceland, the Netherlands and Poland a large proportion is paid by employees.






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