Canadians now use nearly 42 per cent of their average $69,175 household income to pay taxes -- income, sales, property, liquor, tobacco -- compared to about a third of their $5,000 income in 1961.
Niels Veldhuis, the study's co-author, said the tax take amounted to $28,878 in 2009, compared with $1,675 in 1961.
"The increase in the tax bill outstrips the increase in all other expenditures," the director of fiscal studies at the Fraser Institute said.
The report by the fiscally conservative think-tank showed the total tax bill of the average Canadian family has increased 1,624 per cent since 1961, while expenditures on housing rose 1,198 per cent, food by 559 per cent and clothing by 526 per cent.
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The average family pays 42% of income in taxes. Where do you figure the limit for maximum total taxes should be? Is 42% about right? Should it be 50%? Even higher? Or should it be less?


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