BOHANON & STYRING: Carmel shouldn’t get into the hotel business
In 21st century Indiana, is there any limit to what government can do as long as “economic development” is the justification?
In 21st century Indiana, is there any limit to what government can do as long as “economic development” is the justification?
The subsidy says we want cheaper solar costs to encourage more solar projects. Tariffs on cheaper imported cells and panels say we want higher-cost solar projects.
No corporation ever paid a dime in taxes. People, in some capacity, pay all taxes.
Forcing steel-using firms to substitute high-cost U.S. steel for low-cost foreign imports makes those businesses less competitive.
Ever since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, we’ve been substituting machine power for muscle power. The main consequence has been that life has gotten better.
Purdue University’s purchase of online college Kaplan University should be considered in the context of at least two economic principles: composite goods and division of labor.
No myth causes more mischief than the fiction of the “Social Security Trust Fund.
Venezuelans aren’t eating high on the hog. Common people aren’t eating much hog—or anything else.
CBO doesn’t look beyond immediate, first-order consequences of legislation.
Sometime in early autumn, the U.S. Treasury will run out of cash and once again beg Congress to raise the debt limit.
Sometimes paying for something is better than getting it for free. Enter private enterprise.
When there’s an international boundary involved, The principle of free exchange making everyone better off gets lost in a wave of “us” versus “them.”
A shift by utility producers from coal to natural gas is happening without any Paris Accord or a single regulation from the U.S. Department of Energy.
During a crisis, government grows in scope, power and budget. All recede somewhat after the crisis. But never to pre-crisis levels.
If society is determined to help those with expensive medical problems, the way to do it is … well, by helping those with expensive medical problems.
Indiana’s byzantine liquor laws recently provided a clean textbook example—a natural experiment—of the Law of Demand.
The Federalist Papers regarded federalism and its cousin, the separation of powers, as surer bulwarks of liberty than anything written into the Bill of Rights.
Women tend to choose lower-paying occupations, and are more likely to have career interruptions for childbearing/child care and for care of elderly relatives. This results in lower pay.
Assuming the government’s interest is in educating the child and not in providing employment at public schools, the state should be indifferent as to how and where the educating takes place.
America First is a nice slogan, but let’s not push things too far.