Denmark clocks in as having the fourth highest tax rate in the world at 44.4%. On the surface, high taxes have not had the chilling effect on Denmark that they appear to be having on other highly taxed nations. An ABC News story, for instance, reports that “Danes Rank Themselves as Happy and Content” – indeed, the happiest nation on Earth – despite the tax burden they bear. Furthermore, the high taxes mean that “a banker can end up taking home as much money as an artist” so that “people don’t chose careers based on income or status.” However, outsiders are skeptical of whether high taxes impose a bigger burden than is acknowledged. The New York Times (hardly an enemy of high taxation) reported in 2007 – the same year of ABC’s story – that Denmark’s tax structure was worsening a labor shortage. As in Germany, the Times found that “the Danish labor force had shrunk by about 19,000 people through the end of 2005” (significant in a country of less than 6 million) because “Danes and others had moved elsewhere.” To its credit, Denmark does boast the 16th highest GDP per capita at $37,304 – impressive for a small and highly taxed nation.