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NY Times: Rampant Tax Cheating Exacerbates Greek Budget Crisis

New York Times, Greek Wealth Is Everywhere but Tax Forms:

Signs of wealth abound in Athens, but only a few thousand Greeks out of 11 million declared an income of more than $132,000 last year, according to the Finance Ministry.

In the wealthy, northern suburbs of this city, where summer temperatures often hit the high 90s, just 324 residents checked the box on their tax returns admitting that they owned pools.

So tax investigators studied satellite photos of the area — a sprawling collection of expensive villas tucked behind tall gates — and came back with a decidedly different number: 16,974 pools.

That kind of wholesale lying about assets, and other eye-popping cases that are surfacing in the news media here, points to the staggering breadth of tax dodging that has long been a way of life here.

Such evasion has played a significant role in Greece’s debt crisis, and as the country struggles to get its financial house in order, it is going after tax cheats as never before.

Various studies, including one by the Federation of Greek Industries last year, have estimated that the government may be losing as much as $30 billion a year to tax evasion — a figure that would have gone a long way to solving its debt problems.

For a contrary view, see Dan Mitchell (Cato Institute), Greece's Problem Is High Tax Rates, Not Tax Evasion:

The New York Times has an article describing widespread tax evasion in Greece, along with an implication that the country’s fiscal crisis is largely the result of unpaid taxes and could be mostly solved if taxpayers were more obedient to the state. This is grossly inaccurate. A quick look at the budget numbers reveals that tax revenues have remained relatively constant in recent years, consuming nearly 40 percent of GDP. The burden of government spending, by contrast, has jumped significantly and now exceeds 50 percent of Greek economic output.

The article also is flawed in assuming that harsher enforcement is the key to compliance. As the video shows, even the economists at the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development admit that tax evasion is driven by high tax rates (which is remarkable since the OECD is the international bureaucracy pushing for global tax rules to undermine tax competition and reduce fiscal sovereignty).

(Hat Tip: Ann Murphy.)


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10 responses to “NY Times: Rampant Tax Cheating Exacerbates Greek Budget Crisis

  1. Roth & Company, P.C. Avatar

    How much tax is enough tax?

    Greece has spent itself into crisis. It has an enormously bloated public sector spends 50% of that country’s GDP -…

  2. Roth & Company, P.C. Avatar

    How much tax is enough tax?

    Greece has spent itself into crisis. It has an enormously bloated public sector spends 50% of that country’s GDP -…

  3. Roth & Company, P.C. Avatar

    How much tax is enough tax?

    Greece has spent itself into crisis. It has an enormously bloated public sector spends 50% of that country’s GDP -…

  4. Roth & Company, P.C. Avatar

    How much tax is enough tax?

    Greece has spent itself into crisis. It has an enormously bloated public sector spends 50% of that country’s GDP -…

  5. Roth & Company, P.C. Avatar

    How much tax is enough tax?

    Greece has spent itself into crisis. It has an enormously bloated public sector spends 50% of that country’s GDP -…

  6. Roth & Company, P.C. Avatar

    How much tax is enough tax?

    Greece has spent itself into crisis. It has an enormously bloated public sector spends 50% of that country’s GDP -…

  7. Roth & Company, P.C. Avatar

    How much tax is enough tax?

    Greece has spent itself into crisis. It has an enormously bloated public sector spends 50% of that country’s GDP -…

  8. Roth & Company, P.C. Avatar

    How much tax is enough tax?

    Greece has spent itself into crisis. It has an enormously bloated public sector spends 50% of that country’s GDP -…

  9. Roth & Company, P.C. Avatar

    How much tax is enough tax?

    Greece has spent itself into crisis. It has an enormously bloated public sector spends 50% of that country’s GDP -…

  10. setnaffa Avatar
    setnaffa

    We should all be as honest in paying our taxes as Timothy Geithner and Charles Rangel…

  11. Jeff Avatar
    Jeff

    Laffer Curve anyone? Only those from Harvard don’t seem to know about this phenomenon.

  12. CG Avatar
    CG

    Thanks for this. No one has been tackling this issue, and that is a shame. Here is a short overview of the Greek income tax system:
    Income tax:
    0 Up to 7,834 Euros
    14% 7,835-52,552 Euros
    42% 52,553-250,400 Euros
    45% 250,401 and over Euros
    Add to this a 16% Employer contribution to their “Social Security” and a 28% employer contribution.
    And then there is the 19% VAT…
    The result is…surprise…no one pays taxes and the “shadow” economy in Greece is nearly 28% of GDP (in the U.S. its around 7%).

  13. David W. Lincoln Avatar
    David W. Lincoln

    I would amend your comment Jeff to this: they do not want to know. Why? Because anything which counters their conclusions results in too much change for them to
    handle.

  14. PapayaSF Avatar
    PapayaSF

    In addition, there are the perverse incentives taxes can create. When I was in Greece 30 years ago, I saw lots of just-started but seemingly abandoned construction: foundations with rusty rebar sticking out. I was informed that landowners didn’t pay tax on land during the process of construction. Thus, lots of buildings perpetually “under construction.”

  15. anon Avatar
    anon

    The idea of $30 billion “lost” to unpaid Greek taxes is sort of ridiculous on its face.
    The Greek gov’t couldn’t “lose” that money because it never had it to begin with. The higher the tax rates, the higher the incentives to skirt taxes.
    Anyone whose ever spent time in Greece knows the taxes are ridiculously high and that tax cheating is the national sport. In Greece, if you pay your taxes, you’re not a “patriot”, you’re an “idiot”.

  16. Bill Avatar
    Bill

    When you have poor compliance, you overtax those who pay thereby raising marginal rates. Normally Greece has a lower percent of tax as GDP than do some other nations such as France, Austria and Norway. No one claims that any of the three are in bad shape. The whole issue is more complex than simple blurbs such as the chap from Cato makes it seem. It is lovely to have a simple faith in a few principles. Life is then so easy.

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