BOHANON & CUROTT: Cut in marginal tax rate should spur growth
What we like best about the new federal tax law is that it reduces marginal tax rates for almost all taxpayers, both individual and corporate.
What we like best about the new federal tax law is that it reduces marginal tax rates for almost all taxpayers, both individual and corporate.
the controversy over the Yellowwood Back Country Area in Brown County raises an interesting question: Should conflicts over public land be resolved through a political or market process?
The movement to modify licensing requirements for public schoolteachers is coming to Indiana. It’s about time.
National defense is a public good that must be provided by the government. Yet the holiday season offers ample examples of public goods that need not be.
The pilgrims discovered the hard way the weaknesses in the communal-property-rights model.
it looks like the GOP will do what it has always done: Offer zero taxes to an increasing proportion of the population to buy growth-enhancing tax cuts elsewhere.
A constant debate in every Macroeconomics class since at least 1975 is, to what extent can or should the Federal Reserve provide policy certainty?
But northern Indianapolis suburbs have been scoring rather well in several recent rankings.
tariffs aren’t really about fair trade; they’re all about fixing the market for domestic firms at the expense of the rest of us.
They neither reshape consumer behavior to the desired ends nor provide a stable revenue source for local governments.
Congress has “pivoted” from health care to taxes. This means we’re doomed to much high-sounding rhetoric about “fairness.”
One commentator goes so far as to claim index funds are “worse than Marxism.”
Prices are how resources are directed to their highest valued uses. A higher price says both “use less” and “we want more.”
In a free market, government plays a vital role in enforcing laws against violence, fraud and theft, and in resolving contract disputes.
One service the NCAA provides for its members is to rig the market for student athletes
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.