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75% tax rate is very common in Europe even for workers with average salary. There are many hidden taxes such as 'social security insurance payed by employer'.



A load of tosh. "Income tax rates in France" in google gives you them with ease.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxation_in_France#Taxes_on_inc...

In order to hit 40% income tax, you have to be a single on 70k or a nuclear family on 210k. Even if they have 20% VAT equivalent, that only works out to another 10% of what's left, leaving 50% as disposable income. And that's the highest tax bracket, and given that the average wage in France is supposedly ~30k euro, that's less than half the highest bracket cutoff.


As I wrote there is lot of hidden stuff such as taxes payed by employer plus social and health insurance. I don't care how it is called officially. It is calculated as percentage from income and one may go to jail for not paying it. There are also non-income taxes such as 60 percent VAT on petrol.

I am not French (Czech living in Ireland), so I dont know what is situation exactly, but I bet it is not much different. In Czech Republic I payed about 55% tax from my 1500 euro/month salary (bellow average for Prague).

From wiki you linked: > Taxes paid by employers on wages, namely social contributions, are not considered as taxes by the French central government.


>There are many hidden taxes such as 'social security insurance payed by employer'.

He's taking about hidden taxes such as this one, which is paid by the employer, so many French people I've talked to about it seem to think it's somehow magically not money out of their pocket.


You can see those as compulsory 401(k), health and disability insurance.


I doubt that it does in any EU country. In France it actually does not exceed 50% including VAT. (http://www.revolution-fiscale.fr/le-systeme-actuel/des-impot...)


or VAT (sales tax) in whereabouts of 20%.




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