Romania leads the European Union in labor taxation, with over 40% of wages going to the state through taxes and contributions, according to Eurostat data. For a single Romanian without children, the effective tax rate reaches 41.5%. Countries like Lithuania and Belgium follow with rates above 37%, while Cyprus has the lowest at 15%, followed by Greece and the Czech Republic. Despite this high taxation, Romania has seen the fastest income growth in the EU over the past 15 years, though income inequality remains significant. The minimum wage in Romania was recently increased by nearly 300 lei to 4,325 lei gross.
Procjena pristranosti (Sredina): The article presents statistical data from Eurostat without overtly biased language or selective sourcing. It reports on tax rates across EU countries neutrally, providing comparative figures and contextual information about Romania’s economic situation. There is no clear ideological framing or slav




