Release of Taxing Wages by the OECD

2016 | 2015 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 | 1999 | 1998
Opinion Piece Benchmarking Tax and Spending
March 28, 2006
Smartcard, GST, Tax, Fuel, Bracket Creep – Interview with Neil Mitchell, 3AW
March 30, 2006
Opinion Piece Benchmarking Tax and Spending
March 28, 2006
Smartcard, GST, Tax, Fuel, Bracket Creep – Interview with Neil Mitchell, 3AW
March 30, 2006

Release of Taxing Wages by the OECD

NO.013

RELEASE OF TAXING WAGES BY THE OECD

The OECD publication Taxing Wages 2004-2005 released this evening shows that average net tax rates for Australian singles and families have decreased since 2000.

The publication uses a new definition of average wage which now covers both service and manufacturing sector full-time adult employees. The average wage for an Australian in 2004-05 was $51,169 using this definition.

Table 1 below summarises the reduction in the ‘tax wedge’ for eight different family types. In this table the tax wedge is measured as income tax plus employee social security contributions plus employer payroll taxes less cash benefits, all divided by labour costs. The level of employer payroll taxes is 6 per cent, being the rate for New South Wales.

Underlying the improvement in the tax wedge have been the personal tax cuts in 2000-01, 2003-04 and 2004-05 as well as the improvement in family tax benefits for families with children.

The 2005 results show that Australia has the sixth-lowest tax wedge for a single employee among the 30 OECD countries. This is also true for other family types where Australia is ranked between the second- and eighth-lowest of the 30 OECD countries.

When compared in terms of US dollars, Australian single average workers have a net wage of US$28,000 which is the seventh-highest net wage of the 30 OECD countries. This is higher than the comparable US wage of US$24,206.

The comparisons for a single-income couple with two children earning the average wage reflect the same pattern. For Australia, the average net income was US$32,816, which was the sixth-highest of the 30 OECD countries and which exceeded the US average of US$30,081.

29 March 2006

CANBERRA

Contact: David Alexander

(02) 6277 7340

Table 1: The Tax Wedge: Income tax plus employee contributions plus employer contributions and payroll tax less cash benefits as a percentage of labour costs

Fiscal Year for Australia:

1999-2000

2004-2005

OECD Year:

2000

2005

Family type and wage level

 

Single person without children at 67% of average earnings

25.4

24.8

 

 

 

Single person without children at 100% of average earnings

30.6

28.3

 

 

 

Single person without children at 167% of average earnings

38.4

35.6

 

 

 

Single parent with two children at 67% of average earnings

0.9

-5.5

 

 

 

One-earner married couple with two children at 100% of average earnings

22.7

16.0

 

 

 

Two-earner married couple, one at 100% of average earnings and the other at 33% with two children

24.1

20.5

 

 

 

Two-earner married couple, one at 100% of average earnings and the other at 67% with two children

26.2

23.1

 

 

 

Two-earner married couple, one at 100% of average earnings and the other at 33%, with no children

27.0

25.2