http://www.oecd.org/tax/taxing-wages-20725124.htm
You can also read every country's summary from the report. Belgium's is funny: every paragraph starts with the same sentence. "Belgian tax payers in this category pay the highest of any taxes, and..."
*snrk*
Yeah, sure. Most of Europe is famous for them, but they aren't. Compare and contrast to Russia, China, Morocco, Australia, Indonesia, Japan,... There's fame and reality. Most European countries do not have horribly restrictive immigration policies, we have very restrictive immigration policies coupled with very lax asylum regulations. Want to look at the numbers of Syrians that've flocked to Belgium the last 2 years? I was just studying up - in all of the major cities in Belgium, in children aged 0-5, people with European ancestry (not "Belgians" - European!) are now heavily in the minority, in some cases being less than 1/3 of the children. I'm not opposed, really, but consider that for a second - amongst that 1/3, there's still some 10% or so from other nationalities in Europe. Children with "Belgian" parents are about 20%-25% of all children. Do we really need to accept even more immigrants than we're already doing for you to say we're not restrictive? Go have a look at
https://suburbanstats.org/ and see if you can find any place with anything resembling that. Oh, I know: Belgian ancestry is less common in our youth than Hispanics in California. Belgian ancestry is less common than black people in NY state. Slowly but surely, Belgium (especially Brussels and Antwerp) are becoming more superdiverse than NYC or any other "melting pot" you care to name. There's a reason the extreme right is scoring high - people feel displaced in their own country. I mean, yes, people just need to suck it up and deal with it - I don't care that the future of my country will be slightly more colored than I am - but claiming we're too restrictive really comes off as not knowing what you're talking about these days. Turningback boats in the Mediterranean is no worse than, oh, shooting people crossing the border in Texas. To go with another stereotype.