Secret Assets Owners
  • Investing
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick
Editor's PickInvesting

US Has the Most Progressive Tax System in the Developed World

by January 6, 2026
January 6, 2026

Adam N. Michel

The United States places an unusually heavy share of the tax burden on higher earners. You wouldn’t know this from hearing some politicians claim that the rich escape next to tax-free or deserve to be taxed at higher rates. In reality, the data show the opposite. The most recent example is a study by the Fraser Institute, which shows the US ranks first out of 33 developed countries as having the most progressive tax system.

Progressive tax systems, where tax rates and tax shares increase with income, are often idealized by big-government redistributionists, but they come with trade-offs. As tax systems become more progressive, they make each additional hour of work or investment less rewarding, weakening incentives to work longer hours, take entrepreneurial risks, start new ventures, or invest in continuing education. Over time, these effects compound, slowing economic progress and material well-being for everyone. Highly progressive tax systems are also more volatile revenue sources, unfairly treat similar citizens in vastly different ways, encourage avoidance and evasion, and increase administrative complexity. 

The Fraser Institute authors construct an index of five measures of a tax system’s progressivity, capturing differences between the top and bottom income tax rates, the top bracket threshold and personal exemptions as a share of the average wage, the income tax share of total revenue, and the consumption tax share of total revenue. The final index, summarized in Figure 1, ranks countries from 0 to 10, with 10 being the most progressive tax system.

The index separates out subnational governments with significant taxing authority and evaluates combined national and subnational tax systems. On this measure, California tops the chart, pairing the top US federal income tax rate (37 percent) with the highest state income tax rate in the country (13.3 percent) and ranking highly on the other measures of progressivity. California is followed by Newfoundland and Labrador, the most progressive Canadian province, with a top provincial tax rate of 21.8 percent, combined with Canada’s federal income tax of 33 percent. The combined top rate is higher than California’s, but the rest of the Canadian tax structure is less progressive, giving California the top spot.

Texas comes in fourth, serving as the US benchmark for the least progressive state tax system, since it levies no state income tax and thus reflects only the federal income tax. All other US states fall between California and the seven no-income-tax states, like Texas, on the progressivity scale. At the bottom of the index are Hungary and Estonia, both of which operate flat national income tax systems.

Taking a simple average of the highest- and lowest-progressivity states or provinces, the United States as a whole outranks every other country in the dataset, giving it the most progressive tax system.

The structure of the US tax code plays a central role in the rankings. The federal income tax is highly progressive, with a relatively low marginal rate of 10 percent for lower-income filers and a top rate of 37 percent for higher incomes. Combined with the absence of a broad-based national consumption tax (like a value-added tax), the result is a highly concentrated tax burden on the highest-income Americans.

This is not a novel result. Research by the World Inequality Lab concludes that “the US stands out as the country with the highest level of tax progressivity: the top decile faces a tax rate that is more than 70 percent higher than that of the poorest half of the population.” And recent research from Emmanuel Saez, Gabriel Zucman, and co-authors finds that US billionaires pay higher tax rates than their counterparts in the Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, and France. (I reviewed their study here.) 

The United States is unique among developed nations in relying on such a narrow portion of taxpayers to finance such a large share of government revenue. We can sustain this structure largely because overall US tax levels are relatively low. Taxes as a share of GDP in the US are almost ten percentage points lower than the European average. Historically, low taxes have benefited American workers and businesses. However, if federal spending remains on its projected path, the size of the American government will match average European levels, necessitating a European level and mix of taxation.

We would be better off cutting spending to keep taxes low. But the lesson from the rest of the world is that high spending requires less progressive tax systems and high taxes on the poor and the middle class, not just the rich.

previous post
Treasury Should Tread Lightly When Regulating New Federal Tax Credit Scholarship Program
next post
House GOP summons health insurers to Capitol Hill as Obamacare battle escalates

You may also like

Should Policy Restrict Share Buybacks?

February 26, 2026

Pentagon’s Demands on Anthropic Would Remove Layers of...

February 26, 2026

Election Policy Roundup

February 26, 2026

Sore Losers at the Supreme Court: The Government...

February 26, 2026

Against a Two-for-One Offer of Price Controls on...

February 26, 2026

Social Media Addiction Trial Begins, With Stakes for...

February 25, 2026

The Invincibility Gap: How Constitutional Safeguards Have Become...

February 25, 2026

A “War on Fraud” Will Not Balance the...

February 25, 2026

How the Welfare State’s Financing Structure Enables Waste,...

February 25, 2026

The New Trump Tariffs Are Also Unlawful

February 24, 2026
Join The Exclusive Subscription Today And Get Premium Articles For Free


Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

Recent Posts

  • Trump’s Greenland push drives Danish PM to call early election

    February 27, 2026
  • Massie-led push to handcuff Trump on Iran gets Jeffries’ backing

    February 26, 2026
  • Iran rejects Trump demands despite ‘significant progress’ in nuclear talks

    February 26, 2026
  • China expands space footprint in Latin America, raising military alarms in America’s backyard

    February 26, 2026
  • Vance says America ‘cannot give power back to congressional Democrats’ following their behavior at SOTU

    February 26, 2026
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2025 SecretAssetsOwners.com All Rights Reserved.


Back To Top
Secret Assets Owners
  • Investing
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Stock
  • Editor’s Pick