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The purpose of this annual publication is to provide internationally comparative data on tax levels and tax structures in member countries of the OECD. The taxes imposed in each country are presented in a standardised framework based upon the OECD classification of taxes and its Interpretative Guide as contained in Annex A to this Report.
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This annual Report presents detailed internationally comparable data on the tax revenues of OECD countries for all levels of government. The present edition provides outturn data on tax revenues in 1965-2010. In addition, provisional estimates of total revenues in 2011 are included for most countries. For the purpose of this Report the term “taxes” is confined to compulsory, unrequited payments to general government. Taxes are unrequited in the sense that benefits provided by government to taxpayers are not normally in proportion to their payments. In the OECD classification, taxes are classified by the base of the tax: income and profits (heading 1000), payroll (heading 3000), property (heading 4000), consumption (heading 5000) and other taxes (heading 6000). Compulsory social security contributions paid to general government are treated as taxes, classified under heading 2000.The tax concept, the classification of taxes and the accrual basis of reporting are set out in the Interpretative Guide to the Revenue Statistics; see Annex A to this Report.
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In all of the following tables the symbol (..) indicates not available/or not applicable and (*) estimated. The main series in this volume cover the years 1965 to 2010. Figures referring to 1966-1974, 1976-1984, 1986-1989, 1991-1994, 1996-1999 and 2001-2006 have been omitted because of lack of space. A complete series is, however, available on CD-ROM. Data for 1955 and 1960 (for nineteen OECD countries) are provided in Part V of the 1998 edition of this Report.
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The tax data presented in this part of the Report have been attributed to the sub-sectors of general government identified in section J of the Interpretative Guide (see Annex A) and the attribution criteria used are those set out in that guide. The column “supranational” reports the customs duties collected by the twenty-one EU member states on behalf of the European Union.
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