Of the 29 countries for which 2011 data are available, tax revenues rose as a proportion of GDP in 20 and fell in only 6. This demonstrates a more pronounced trend toward higher tax revenues than in 2010, when there was a more even balance of increases and decreases across countries.

Chile, France, the Czech Republic and Germany saw the largest increases in 2011, and Hungary, Estonia and Sweden the largest falls.

Increasing tax ratios in 2010 and 2011 are due to a combination of factors. With a progressive tax regime, economic recovery led to tax revenues rising faster than GDP and at the same time many countries raised tax rates and/or broadened bases. In 2008 and 2009, the declining ratios reflected the severity of the recession and that some countries responded by cutting tax rates.

“This increase in 2011 tax revenues supports fiscal consolidation efforts in many countries”, said OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría. “However, if OECD countries want to pursue these long-term strategies successfully, the increase in tax revenue must go hand in hand with efforts to restore long-term growth prospects, strengthen economic activity and create jobs.”

Revenue pressures have hit some levels of government harder than others, with the average tax ratio for local governments remaining steady since 2007 but declining for central, state and regional governments.

European countries most affected by the financial crisis and subsequent recession - Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain – experienced an initial sharp fall in tax revenues in 2008 and 2009 and a small recovery in revenues since then.

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Chile (1.8 percentage points) and France (1.4 points) saw the largest tax ratio increases between 2010 and 2011. Other European countries with significant rises were the Czech Republic (1.1), Germany (1.0), Finland (0.9), Iceland (0.7) and the UK (0.7).
The largest fall was in Hungary with a decline from 37.9% of GDP to 35.7%. Two other countries - Estonia and Sweden - showed falls of one percentage point or more.
The increase in the US was in line with the OECD unweighted average, from 24.8% of GDP in 2010 to 25.1% in 2011.
Compared with 2007 (pre-crisis) ratios, tax to GDP ratios in 2011 were still down by more than 3 percentage points in four countries – Spain, Greece, Hungary and Israel. The biggest fall has been in Spain - from 37.3% of GDP in 2007 to 31.6% of GDP in 2011.
Historically, tax-to-GDP ratios rose through the 1990s, to a peak OECD average of 35.2% in 2000. They fell back slightly between 2001 and 2004, but then rose again between 2005 and 2007 before falling back following the crisis.
Denmark has the highest tax-to-GDP ratio among OECD countries (48.1% in 2011), followed by Sweden (44.5%).
Mexico (19.7% in 2011) and Chile (21.4%) have the lowest tax-to-GDP ratios among OECD countries. They are by followed Turkey at 25.0%, the United States which has the fourth lowest ratio in the OECD region at 25.1% and Korea at 25.9%.
The tax burden in Mexico increased from 17.7% to 19.7% between 2007 and 2011. Four other countries - Estonia, Germany, Luxembourg and Turkey - showed increases of 1-2 percentage points over the same period.
2010 data, the latest year for which a breakdown of revenues by category of tax is available for all OECD countries, show that revenues from corporate income taxes have steadied since the sharp falls of 2008 and 2009. However the share of these taxes in total revenues remains, at 9%, somewhat below its 11% share in 2007. On the other hand, the share of social security contributions has increased by 2% points to an average of 26.4% of total revenues.