Editorial responsibility

Tax Terms Lexicon Canada is edited by Fuad Efendi, with the site judged by whether it helps readers understand Canadian tax terms clearly and accurately.

The editorial model is practical rather than performative: draft, verify the jurisdiction, remove drift, tighten the explanation, connect the concept to the right neighbouring terms, and keep the site focused on Canadian tax language instead of generic finance residue.

The target is a Canadian tax handbook that reads like a calm reference library, not a keyword dump and not a personal-advice blog.

Use This Page When

  • you want to know who is responsible for editorial direction
  • you want the human-review model behind the site
  • you need to understand how weak prototype content gets filtered, rewritten, or deleted
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Editorial Priorities

  • tax relevance over keyword sprawl
  • Canada-first terminology over imported U.S. wording
  • plain-language explanation over jargon and legalistic filler
  • related-term networks over isolated glossary stubs
  • practical taxpayer workflow over abstract theory

Typical Editorial Sequence

  1. check the page for jurisdiction drift and scope drift
  2. rewrite the definition so it matches Canadian tax usage
  3. tighten comparisons and related links so the page becomes navigable
  4. remove residue that still does not belong instead of preserving it as filler

What Usually Gets Removed

  • U.S.-first or IRS-first residue copied into Canadian pages
  • generic finance filler that does not actually explain a tax term
  • abstract accounting language with no clear taxpayer workflow
  • duplicated weak pages that do not justify their own URL

What This Page Does Not Claim

  • It does not claim every page has been reviewed by a licensed tax professional.
  • It does not claim the site replaces current CRA guidance, forms, slips, notices, or professional advice.
  • It does not claim a single glossary page is enough for a high-stakes tax decision.

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