Ahead of his event in North Dakota yesterday in support of tax reform, Donald Trump insisted that the United States is “the highest taxed nation in the world.” Almost immediately, reality-based observers explained that the president was clearly lying about a subject he only pretends to understand.
Despite the pushback, Trump went to Bismarck and repeated the exact same claim: “So we’re here today to talk about a plan to create a new age of American prosperity by reducing the crushing tax burden on our companies and on our workers. The taxes are crazy — the highest taxed nation in the world.”
Presidential repetition does not make a falsehood true.
America’s tax revenue is 26 percent of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which is significantly lower than the average 34 percent other developed countries pay relative to their GDP, according to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center. Denmark, France and Sweden are among those nations that top America on taxes.
The U.S. tax burden per capita — $14,115 — also is below average in relation to other developed nations, as well, data from the Tax Policy Center shows.
An Associated Press report added that the overall U.S. tax burden “is actually one of the lowest among the 32 developed and large emerging-market economies tracked by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.”
There are different metrics for measuring a country’s tax rates, but there is literally no metric in which the United States is “the highest taxed nation in the world.”









