| Rodriguez for Congress campaign Tax Reform
 
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            [October 11, 2016]
            
            
            
             To many individuals the U.S. Tax System 
			is a reflection of the government as a whole, as the tax code is 
			bloated, unnecessarily complex, and seemingly broken. If we were to 
			combine all the statutes, regulations, and related case law that 
			constitute the tax code, the total would include about 70,000 pages 
			consisting of more than ten million words. Such a lengthy and 
			complex system creates a huge burden when it comes to the amount of 
			time and related costs to comply with our broken system to the tune 
			of an estimated 8.9 billion hours and $409 billion in lost 
			productivity per year. | 
        
            |   Much of the complexity in the tax code results 
			from the numerous deductions that have accrued over time due to the 
			toxic influence of special interests. In addition, the U.S. 
			currently maintains the highest marginal corporate tax rate of all 
			developed nations in the world at 39.1 percent as compared to the 
			average rate of 24.1 percent among the other developed nations. This 
			system is untenable since such a tax rate makes the U.S. a less 
			competitive place to do business and encourages multination 
			corporations to find creative ways to shift as much income overseas 
			to countries with lower tax rates. This, in turn, creates an unwieldly situation in which the firms that have the most creative 
			accountants benefit over those that provide the best products and 
			services. Moreover, this causes tremendous disparity in the amount 
			that different companies pay in taxes while also decreasing 
			government revenues and limiting necessary vital services. 
			
			 With such a high level of complexity and a high compliance cost, it 
			is clear that we need to do better to reform our current tax system. 
			The goals of any tax reform initiative should be to reduce 
			complexity, to create a fairer system, and to reduce compliance 
			costs so that individuals and businesses can reallocate their 
			resources to more productive tasks. In order for us to achieve this 
			end, we must work together in a bipartisan fashion to restructure 
			our tax system rather than simply applying new bandages to a broken 
			system.
 Such fixes to the tax code will need to include a simplification in 
			the number of the special deductions and tax credits that are 
			currently available. Since these deductions and credits create 
			unneeded complexity, we can more effectively achieve the goal of 
			generating government revenues without increasing tax rates on 
			average Americans by creating simple individual and family 
			allowances that would be available to all Americans to ensure that 
			equitability and fairness are essential elements of any tax system 
			overhaul.
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			 In addition, it is essential that we create a more 
			competitive corporate tax system that reduces the marginal tax rates 
			on corporate income while simultaneously eliminating tax loopholes 
			for certain business that cost the government billions of dollars in 
			needed revenue. Such a step is important to create an environment 
			where entrepreneurs can focus on running their businesses instead of 
			navigating the tax system. As Americans, we do not have to accept a 
			broken and overly complex tax system. Instead, we should and must 
			demand true reforms that streamline the system and raise sufficient 
			revenues to fund government services adequately. By making a firm 
			commitment to bipartisanship in order to get things done, we can 
			achieve real reforms such as creating more competitive corporate tax 
			rates, an idea for which both Democrats and Republicans have 
			indicated support in the past.
 Junius Rodriguez believes that essential fairness must be the 
			benchmark as we reform the U.S. tax code. He noted that “Great 
			nations are those that shoulder the responsibility that is incumbent 
			upon them rather than bequeath to future generations the burden of 
			our folly. True tax reform that is fair and equitable in nature can 
			be our greatest civic undertaking of this century, and if done 
			properly, it can generate much-needed revenue to serve the nation’s 
			interests. This is what the People today are demanding of those who 
			wish to serve and lead.”
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