America Celebrates Tax Freedom Day®
America's Tax Freedom Day® Arrives April 30 in 2007, Two Days Later Than 2006
Tax Freedom Day® will fall on April 30 in 2007, according to the Tax Foundation's annual calculation using the latest government data on income and taxes. (Click here to read the full study).
"Tax freedom will come two days later in 2007 than it did in 2006," said Tax Foundation President Scott A. Hodge, "and fully 12 days later than in 2003, when tax cuts caused Tax Freedom Day to arrive comparatively early, on April 18."
However, 2007's Tax Freedom Day is still slightly arlier than it was in 2000, when the economic boom, the tech bubble and higher tax rates pushed tax burdens to a record high, and Tax Freedom Day was postponed until May 5.
Tax Freedom Day, 1980-2007 (click for larger image)
"The economy has been growing at a good clip since mid-2003," said Hodge, "and those growing incomes are pushing people into higher tax brackets. When that happens, tax collections grow faster than incomes."
The report is Tax Foundation Special Report No. 152, "America Celebrates Tax Freedom Day®," by Hodge and Tax Foundation economist Curtis Dubay. The report traces the course of America's tax burden since 1900, examines the composition of today's tax burden by type of tax, calculates a Tax Freedom Day for each state, and compares tax payments to other typical consumer expenditures.
Days Spent Working to Pay Various Taxes, 2007 (click to enlarge)
Taxes and Other Expenses
The report compares the number
of days Americans work to pay taxes to the number of days they work to support
themselves.
"Americans will work longer to pay for government (120 days) than they will for food, clothing and housing combined (105 days)," said Hodge. "Since 1986 taxes have cost more than these basic necessities. In fact, Americans will work longer to afford federal taxes alone (79 days) than they will to afford housing (62 days)."
In 2007 Americans will work another 41 days to afford their state and local taxes. That makes taxation a bigger financial burden than housing and household operation (62 days), health and medical care (52 days), food (30 days), transportation (30 days), recreation (22 days), or clothing and accessories (13 days).
Days Americans Work to Pay Taxes Compared to Other Expenses, 2007 (click to enlarge)
Tax Freedom Day by State
Six out of the ten states with
the heaviest tax burdens and the latest Tax Freedom Days are in the Northeast:
Connecticut (May 20), New York (May 16), New Jersey (May 10), Vermont (May 09),
Rhode Island (May 09), and Massachusetts (May 06). The other four are Nevada
(May 08), California (May 07), Washington (May 06), and Minnesota (May 04).
Many of these states are taxed the heaviest and celebrate Tax Freedom Day later because of the progressive federal income tax. States with large metropolitan areas offer higher-paying jobs, and as a result, many of the citizens earn enough to pay income tax at the highest rates--currently 25%, 28%, 33% and 35%. As a result, they must work longer to pay their disproportionate share of the tax burden.
The ten states with the lightest total tax burdens celebrate Tax Freedom Day the earliest. Oklahoma's April 12 is the earliest of all. The next nine are Alabama (April 12), Mississippi (April 13), Alaska (April 13), Tennessee (April 15), New Mexico (April 15), Louisiana (April 16), South Dakota (April 16), Texas (April 19), and Idaho (April 19).
In most of these states, Tax Freedom Day is early because of a large number of low-income taxpayers who pay most of their federal income taxes at the lower rates, 10% and 15%.
Tax Freedom Day by State, 2007 (click to enlarge)
How Tax Freedom Day is Calculated
Tax Freedom Day answers
the basic question, "What price is the nation paying for government?" We divide
the most authoritative figure for total tax collections by the most
authoritative figure for the nation's income. The answer this year is that taxes
will amount to 32.7 percent of our income. We convert that percentage into days
worked, and if we started on January 1, it would take until April 30. That's
when we could start keeping some of our earnings. Income and tax data are then
parsed out to the states, yielding 50 state-specific Tax Freedom Days.
The Department of Commerce's Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) is the most authoritative source of income and total tax collection data. For its income measurement, the Tax Freedom Day report uses Net National Product as income, which among BEA's measures of income is most appropriate for comparison to tax collections. Critics of the Tax Freedom Day report claim Net National Product excludes income from capital gains on things such as corporate stocks and home sales. This is false: Net National Product accounts for almost all capital income. (Additional discussion of technical issues can be found in the full Tax Freedom Day report, in the Tax Freedom Day Working Paper (Tax Foundation Working Paper No. 3, coming soon), and at https://www.taxfoundation.org/publications/show/1406.html.)
The Tax Foundation is a nonpartisan, nonprofit tax research organization that has monitored fiscal policy at the federal, state and local levels since 1937.
Table 1: Tax Freedom Day and Tax Burden, Selected Years 1900 - 2007 | ||
Year |
Tax Freedom Day |
Taxes as a Percentage of Income |
1900 |
22-Jan |
5.90% |
1910 |
19-Jan |
5.02% |
1920 |
13-Feb |
11.96% |
1930 |
12-Feb |
11.61% |
1940 |
7-Mar |
17.98% |
1950 |
01-Apr |
24.87% |
1960 |
12-Apr |
27.88% |
1970 |
20-Apr |
29.90% |
1980 |
22-Apr |
30.68% |
1990 |
23-Apr |
30.80% |
2000 |
5-May |
33.98% |
2001 |
1-May |
33.01% |
2002 |
21-Apr |
30.27% |
2003 |
18-Apr |
29.51% |
2004 |
19-Apr |
29.69% |
2005 |
26-Apr |
31.53% |
2006 |
28-Apr |
32.29% |
2007 |
30-Apr |
32.69% |
Source: Office of Management and Budget; Internal Revenue Service; Congressional Research Service; National Bureau of Economic Research; Tax Foundation. |
Table 2: Tax Freedom Day by State and Rank, Calendar Year 2007 | ||
United States |
30-Apr |
- |
Connecticut |
20-May |
1 |
New York |
16-May |
2 |
New Jersey |
10-May |
3 |
Vermont |
9-May |
4 |
Rhode Island |
9-May |
5 |
Nevada |
8-May |
6 |
California |
7-May |
7 |
Washington |
6-May |
8 |
Massachusetts |
6-May |
9 |
Minnesota |
4-May |
10 |
Maine |
4-May |
11 |
Florida |
2-May |
12 |
Wisconsin |
2-May |
13 |
Illinois |
2-May |
14 |
Hawaii |
1-May |
15 |
Maryland |
1-May |
16 |
Virginia |
30-Apr |
17 |
Ohio |
29-Apr |
18 |
Wyoming |
28-Apr |
19 |
Colorado |
28-Apr |
20 |
Pennsylvania |
27-Apr |
21 |
Michigan |
27-Apr |
22 |
Nebraska |
26-Apr |
23 |
North Carolina |
25-Apr |
24 |
Delaware |
24-Apr |
25 |
Arizona |
24-Apr |
26 |
Oregon |
24-Apr |
27 |
Kansas |
24-Apr |
28 |
West Virginia |
23-Apr |
29 |
Indiana |
23-Apr |
30 |
Georgia |
22-Apr |
31 |
Arkansas |
22-Apr |
32 |
New Hampshire |
22-Apr |
33 |
Utah |
22-Apr |
34 |
Iowa |
21-Apr |
35 |
Kentucky |
21-Apr |
36 |
North Dakota |
21-Apr |
37 |
South Carolina |
21-Apr |
38 |
Montana |
21-Apr |
39 |
Missouri |
20-Apr |
40 |
Idaho |
19-Apr |
41 |
Texas |
19-Apr |
42 |
South Dakota |
16-Apr |
43 |
Louisiana |
16-Apr |
44 |
New Mexico |
15-Apr |
45 |
Tennessee |
15-Apr |
46 |
Alaska |
13-Apr |
47 |
Mississippi |
13-Apr |
48 |
Alabama |
12-Apr |
49 |
Oklahoma |
12-Apr |
50 |
D.C. |
12-May |
- |
Note: Leap day is omitted. |
Click here to read the full study.
Click here to view every state's Tax Freedom Day and rank from 1970 to 2007.
(For more information, please call (202) 464-6200.)
Attached Files
- Special Report No. 152, PDF, 476.8 KB