Pages

Welcome, 77 artists, 40 different points of Attica welcomes you by singing Erotokritos an epic romance written at 1713 by Vitsentzos Kornaros

Friday, September 27, 2013

Tax evasion: how much does it cost?

Lionel Messi is in court over allegations of fraud totalling over £3.4m. What's the bigger picture on tax evasion? How much does the Spanish government lose each year and how do other countries compare?

The trial of Barcelona footballer Lionel Messi on charges of tax fraud has come at a time when Spanish government coffers are running particularly low. Which makes it all the more contentious that tax evasion cost Spain €80bn (£67bn) in a single year. But that seems small fry compared to the estimated $337bn the US treasury lost out on.

The numbers, taken from World Bank estimates on the size of each country's shadow economy, are fascinating – even if not perfectly reliable. Counting any type of illicit behaviour is always prone to error and black market activity is no exception.

Europe has the world's biggest black market

When different regions are compared, Europe comes out the worst in terms of the size of its black market and the total amount of tax it loses as a result.

As a region though, Europe also has the highest tax rates in the world. Out of 36 countries looked at, Europeans averaged a tax rate that was 39% of their GDP, compared to a world average of 28%. The lowest rates were found among 39 African countries which had taxes that represented around 17% of their GDP.

Ten biggest countries

In 2010, the latest year that data was available, ten governments in the world lost out on $100bn each (£62bn). Unfortunately, using the total amount of tax lost as the basis for comparison means that interesting case studies like Greece are left out - even if their shadow markets would represent a big chunk of their GDP.

We ranked the biggest ten according to three different measures:1. Total size of the shadow economy2. Tax lost as a result of the shadow economy3. Tax lost as a % of GDP

The US has the world's biggest shadow economy and loses the most tax as a result. But, when looked at as a % of GDP, Russia suffers most as a result of tax evasion - the lost money represents 15% of the country's economic output. You can see how each country compares by clicking on the different options in the chart below.

Switching your view to 'tax lost as a % of GDP' means that the allegations against Messi take on a different dimension - Spain rockets up from 9th to 4th place.

Sick sums

The Tax Justice Network have estimates for every country in the world in a report they published in November 2011. The research specifically focuses on the way that tax evasion affects health care spending. In Bolivia, they found that tax evasion represents 419% of the government's spend on healthcare while in Russia it was 311% making them the top 2 'tax evasion losers'.

What is a shadow economy?

Is a black market really a good reflection of the black hole tax evasion creates? Here's the definition that the World Bank's researchers used so you can decide for yourself:

All market-based legal production of goods and services that are deliberately concealed from public authorities for any of the following reasons:1. to avoid payment of income. value added or other taxes,2. to avoid payment of social security contributions,3. to avoid having to meet certain legal labour market standards, such as minimum wages, minimum working hours, safety standards, etc and4. to avoid complying with certain administrative procedures, such as completing statistical questionnaires or other administrative forms

Does any of this data surprise you? Do you think tax evasion is unavoidable? Share you views here...

Get the numbers and get involved

• Download the full spreadsheet• Contact us at data@theguardian.com• Follow us on Twitter• Like us on Facebook

SpainLionel MessiTax avoidanceTax and spendingRussiaEuropeBoliviaBrazilItalyMona Chalabitheguardian.com © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.theguardian.com