With tax season upon us, it is almost obligatory for Americans to complain about what they’re shelling out to Uncle Sam. According to Gallup polls, 46 percent of Americans think their taxes are too high.
The good news is that figure is near rock-bottom for the past 50 years; the bad news is that tax-related violence has been on the rise for the same period. The most recent example of this trend occurred last month, when software engineer Joe Stack, enraged by disputes with the Internal Revenue Service going back to the 1980s, flew a small plane into an IRS building in Texas.
In a lengthy essay/suicide note posted on his website, Stack styled himself after the early American patriots of “no taxation without representation” fame, reminding us all of the unique prestige of tax revolt in American history. As Stack points out, some of the first lessons American children receive about their nation’s history equates taxes to oppression, and revolt against those taxes to the struggle for liberty and justice for all. This probably contributes to Americans’ widespread distrust of taxation, and the acceptance of that distrust as normal and natural.
But that view of taxation is not shared worldwide. In fact, citizens of some countries are actually happy about paying taxes. If you’re an American reading these words, that statement probably sounds pretty far-fetched. But consider this: the citizens of Denmark pay the highest income taxes in the world (an average of 48.3 percent), and are also the happiest people in the world.
It’s not just that Danes pay those high income taxes: they also pay a Value Added Tax of 25 percent on every cup of coffee or pair of sneakers they buy, making the outcry in my hometown of Chicago over having the highest sales tax of any major city in the US (a whopping 10.25 percent) look picayune by comparison. And then there’s Denmark’s tax on new cars: a heart-stopping 180 percent. So if you buy a car with an MSRP of € 20,000 , you’ll pay an additional € 36,000 to get the car registered and licensed.
The Danish car tax, in and of itself, would probably be enough to provoke armed rebellion in the United States. So why do the citizens of Denmark not only tolerate the array of taxes they pay, but appear downright happy about them?
And just to be clear, Danes aren’t just generally happy, or happy despite the taxes they pay. Rather, they are specifically happy about paying taxes! Take this exchange, for example, from a recent series of “person in the street” interviews from Copenhagen by United States National Public Radio:
KESTENBAUM [Ed—NPR reporter]: You think paying taxes is terrific?
Ms. BAUOLASON [Ed—resident of Copenhagen]: I do actually think it is terrific.
From an American perspective, Denmark “seems to violate the laws of the economic universe.”
The key to this attitude seems to lie in Danes’ trust in government and each other—something I noted in an earlier post. As this video interview with a pair of Danish sociologists suggests, this trust stems from several factors. Among the most important is the widely-shared belief that their society is just, and that socio-economic goods are equitably distributed. As a result, many Danes seem satisfied that they are getting their money’s worth–that is, they enjoy tangible benefits of the taxes they pay in terms of universal health care, tuition-free education through the university level, and employment benefits and security far beyond anything available in the United States.
Meanwhile, things could not be more different in the United States, which ranks 23rd in the world happiness rankings, and where distrust of government has been virtually axiomatic since the Reagan era—if not before. This helps account for a paradox: while the United States has among the lowest income tax rates in the world, and we have nothing like the VAT and auto registration taxes that Danes pay, Americans rarely challenge each others’ complaints about “high taxes.”
In fact, one of the remarkable things about Joe Stack’s anti-tax rant/suicide note is how much it resembles what now constitutes “mainstream” rhetoric on taxation in America—particularly in the aftermath of the government bailout of financial firms following the 2008 economic crisis.
Stack wrote:
Why is it that a handful of thugs and plunderers can commit unthinkable atrocities (and in the case of the GM executives, for scores of years) and when it’s time for their gravy train to crash under the weight of their gluttony and overwhelming stupidity, the force of the full federal government has no difficulty coming to their aid within days if not hours?
Compare this to CNBC newsman Rick Santelli’s now legendary on-air rant of February 2009, in which he sounds many of the same notes as Stack, using virtually identical arguments and references to American history:
So while Stack’s violent actions took this rhetoric to the extreme, the evidence suggests that he was no outlier in his perspective on taxation in America: his basic views are apparently shared by a wide swath of his fellow citizens, from television news reporters to the Tea Party movement to think tanks like the conservative Cato Institute.
What accounts for this extreme disparity between American and Danish attitudes toward taxes? And what does this have to do with the differences between the two countries in terms of happiness?
The evidence suggests that both phenomena stem from perceptions of fairness. While—as the two video interviews from Denmark suggest—many Danes believe that they benefit personally from their tax contributions, the rhetoric of people like Stack, Santelli and others suggest that many Americans believe they get little to nothing in return for their tax contributions. Instead, they believe their taxes benefit the “free riders” in US society—whether conceived as “welfare queens” at the bottom of the socio-economic ladder, or as corporations and executives at the top.
Thus, Stack signed off with this bitter epigram: “The capitalist creed: From each according to his gullibility, to each according to his greed.” For him, it was a bitterness unto death; for like-minded Americans, these beliefs contribute to a sense of pervasive injustice that frustrates their “pursuit of happiness” and makes April 15 a day of national resentment rather than a simple administrative deadline.
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Brooke Harrington is Associate Professor of Economic Sociology at the Copenhagen Business School. She is the author of two books: “Pop Finance: Investment Clubs and the New Investor Populism” (Princeton University Press, 2008) and “Deception: From Ancient Empires to Internet Dating” (Stanford University Press, 2009). She is currently doing research on offshore banking. Harrington blogs at our fellow Contexts blog, Economic Sociology.
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Comments 72
AR — April 15, 2010
There are considers other than simply where the money is going. Taxes are, literally, a protection racket in even the smallest possible government: you hand over tax money in exchange for having people with guns not coming to your house, capturing you, and locking you in a cell. That's going to rub some people the wrong way no matter how much it benefits them.
But really, what it comes down to for me is, if Danes really like paying taxes so much, why do they need to be mandatory in the first place?
Mounir — April 15, 2010
Am I missing something or is Santelli angry about the bailouts? If so, that is very different from being opposed to taxation. It is criticizing the usage, not collection, of taxes.
Vidya — April 15, 2010
I see two obvious factors at work in Danish happiness here: (1) a lower degree of social stratification / economic disparity contributes to greater happiness across the board (evidence of this also comes from studies of small-scale kin-based societies, where people tend to have little stratification and generally high happiness levels); and (2) the fact that high taxes = greater social services, which benefit those portions of the population otherwise likely to be unhappy because of life struggles, as well as those who are successful now but need not constantly fear slipping behind and falling without a social safety net (as Americans do).
As a Canadian, it's kind of amusing to watch our southern neighbours raise hue and cry over their government's attempts to ensure the very things which we know, from research and experience, contribute to greater happiness, health, and life satisfaction. What's less amusing to to see our present government leaders, foolishly and selfishly following an increasingly US-based model, constantly chip away at those very same happiness-inducing things. :-(
Anonnymouse — April 15, 2010
Denmark has amazing family medical leave laws. Daycare providers must hold masters degrees, and they feed the kids great meals, not fries, "juice" that is mostly fake, and reconstituted meat products. So the Danes are well cared for from birth. Education is high; crime is low. Making cars so expensive leads more people to go without, which makes them healthier because they walk or ride bikes.
Helene — April 15, 2010
I really can't believe that danes should be happier than everyother nationalities - to mee, Denmark is a rather cold and dull country, unfriendly to everybody from immigrators and people on the street.
But sure, most of us don't mind paying taxes. I'm not 18 yet, but I'm looking forward to start paying taxes (since my minimum wage also increases, it won't mean that I'll earn less than I do now). I my childhood and youth I've cost society so much (free doctors-visit, vaccines, dental care, education, library etc.) and of course I want to pay that back and help others who need help and care more than I do! Most people I know, are okay with paying taxes, but someone who is more right-wing want to lower the taxes for the richest, so that the industry can earn more. Some also say that it's a problem, that it's so expensive to produce anything in denmark because of the taxes and high wages.
AR — April 15, 2010
Another funny thing about American's attitude towards paying federal taxes is that about half of them don't pay federal taxes.
"Tax Day is a dreaded deadline for millions, but for nearly half of U.S. households it's simply somebody else's problem. About 47 percent will pay no federal income taxes at all for 2009."
Rossa — April 15, 2010
If I were an American, I'd probably be angry too. Paying for corn subsidies and a huge war machine while the country's infarstructure crumbles is not exactly money well spent.
We Finns do pay almost ridiculous amounts of taxes, but we do recieve cheap dental and medical (abortions included) services, 4 month maternity leave, subsidized theater & opera, free university education, free school lunches, wellfare programs etc. So pretty much everybody benefits.
Not that our system is perfect, far from it, but at least taxes makes the society a bit more equal.
Jack — April 15, 2010
I was prepared to be sympathetic to the OP, but it just devolved into silliness way too fast.
Especially all that about Stack (and conveniently leaving out all the parts of his manifesto that were totally contrary to the general ideals of Tea Partiers and other tax protesters):
Someone who flies a plane into a building is not a typical anything.
mj — April 15, 2010
Gosh, all you hippy socialists just don't get it. Don't you realize that Cuba used to have mansions?
skeptifem — April 15, 2010
The tax money is used for some really awful purposes in the US. If all of our taxes went back to social programs instead of towards war or corporate welfare I am sure the attitudes would be the same as they are in denmark. Getting screwed over constantly and having your money go towards murdering people and oppressing developing countries tends to breed distrust.
I don't know how useful the comparison is at all here because of that. The differences are huge. America has a very unique place in the world because of our military and corporate interests.
Basiorana — April 15, 2010
Part of it might be perception of the government and government efficiency. Since Watergate, Americans have had this image of government not as public servants, but as a great "them" that seek to control us. Denmark may simply trust their government more and understand it as an extension of themselves.
In addition, we have the great difference in size. I know when I pay my federal taxes, my congressmen whom I elected will decide some of what is done with the money, but they can easily be outnumbered by those elected by people of the South, or the Midwest, or the Southwest, who really don't share my values and may spend it on things that I disagree with or that hurt me (ie, abstinence-only education, corn subsidies, the war). Denmark is far more homogeneous-- they know that ultimately most of those elected will represent them or other people who generally share their values. I have no such guarantee at the federal level, and in many states with arbitrary borders and mixed populations, I might not even have that at the state level (even in New England, my state-- NH-- has a huge cultural difference between the conservative northern rural area, the liberal coastal towns, and the gimme-but-I-don't-want-to-pay-for-it suburbs of the center-south.
This huge difference in culture and values, even within one state, guarantees someone will be unhappy. I am unhappy if my taxes are used to pay for a war; someone else will be unhappy if they provide assistance to those who don't work; someone else will be unhappy if they provide maternity leave. People cannot even agree that we should pay for the police if they feel the police are too power-hungry or make too many mistakes. I'm pretty sure fire service is the only thing I have not heard anyone complain about their taxes going to. Since everyone in this country always feels like the government is doing SOMETHING inappropriate with their money, it's easier to resent paying it to them.
In Denmark, other Danes are all part of your greater community. There exists a sense of community support. Here, people are so divided by differences in values, religions, geographic barriers, etc that we do not have that community. In some areas the barriers of a car dependent culture and a gap between rich and poor means your own town is not a community. How can we ever come to enough of a consensus to be happy?
rachel — April 15, 2010
"...a heart-stopping 180 percent."
Um, cardiac arrest is a real thing...jussayin...
b — April 15, 2010
I think that the "trusting the government" thing is pretty key. I'd be willing to pay much higher taxes, and to give our government the power to control a lot more things - if I trusted a single person in it to tie their shoe successfully, let alone run any giant complex system properly. And I'm not talking about any administration or party or side - many of the biggest screwups have had solid bipartisan support, and many others have been screwed up in different ways at different times by the two parties.
Until I can trust the U.S. government farther than I can throw them, I'd much rather control my money myself, thanks.
Ben — April 16, 2010
I dont think anyone so far has satisfied the position that taxes are voluntary. If we find them to be coercive then they are by definition immoral. Even ignoring the morality part we can assume that people do not find them to be worth wild if they must be forced to pay for them. For example no one had to be forced to pay for cell phone service and now every one reaps the rewards of the first few cell phone owners i.e. the universal cell phone coverage.
If people find a service to be valuable then they are free to sign a contract to pay for someone to provide it to them. However Government services do not satisfy this condition. For example one should be able to opt out of property taxes if they also give up the associated fire department coverage. This would allow private companies to break government monopolies and if they can not compete then people will decide that taxes are a good thing. But any honest person will realize that everyone will opt out and go with a likely much cheaper private company.
Also on a larger level you have no say what soever in what your taxes do. As we know politicians don't have to keep campaign promises. This shows that voting implies no binding contract on a politician to vote in any particular way. This leaves voting as nothing more than an opinion poll that politicians can follow if they like, or disregard if they like.
DJ — April 16, 2010
The populations of Denmark and the US cannot be compared in this simplistic way. The demographics of the citizens are very different. It's comparing the proverbial apples to oranges.
I have worked a long time in inner city health care with low income white Appalachians and poor urban blacks in the Midwest...and I can tell you there is good percentage everyday that exploits the free health care this state makes available to those who qualify. The medical assistants are very upset that these people can't contribute a dime as co-pay for their health care, yet seem to have money for non-essentials or luxury items( high- end cell phones, expensive jewelry, or gambling at the river casinos; and they always have money to smoke and drink it seems, and they waste money on countless other things, often driving nicer cars than the working poor who can't get the health care,like the medical assistants who just barely don't qualify for these benefits!)
This is a big social problem, and as long as we have people think and act like this, the Danish system won't work here,as we have too many who are clueless, and they simply don't understand that everyone needs to contribute to make the whole better.
It's sad, but I know for a fact that we have too many types of people who bring down this country instead of working to raise it up and make it better for everyone.
I consider myself fairly progressive in many social areas, but my experience with day to day abuses of government programs has made me a lot wiser and more informed, and so I can resist the simplistic and facile rhetoric of many liberals around this issue.
Sally — April 16, 2010
I wonder how the *process* of paying taxes effects our attitudes. I don't know what that process is like in Denmark. At least part of the dread of tax day is having "homework" due at midnight. And often we hire other people to help us with it. This process probably makes the money we pay loom large in tour minds. However, we don't think about how nice it is to get the services we get from the government. In fact, we're more likely to complain about roads, the post office, social security, etc than realize what we're getting for our money.
Dragonclaws — April 16, 2010
I might suggest that Danish people being happy paying taxes is similar to Americans feeling happy by recycling. It's the similar idea of doing your part to make people overall better off. Also, just because people may or may not be happy doesn't point at whether or not what they're doing is good, only what they believe it is.
MartyW — April 22, 2010
Enough with the comparisons to Nordic countries. The US is a completely different beast in terms of population, growth and just about every kind of diversity.
Spreading wealth through services is easy when nearly everyone is rich, and the population is stable.
If they had a population growth like the US, and added the majority of the people at the bottom of the economic pyramid like in the US, their model would fall apart.
Their model depends completely on population stability.
Gwenyth — April 27, 2010
Interesting piece on similar grounds:
http://www.huppi.com/kangaroo/8Comparison.htm
It's a bit dated, since the info is from 1991 but it mostly remains accurate. If anything the trends it shows have very likely increased.