EDITORIAL: Tax provision benefits Hoosiers
A provision of the Trump tax plan would shift some federal tax burden away from lower-tax states to higher ones but the larger plan needs evaluation before we know whether it’s good for Hoosiers overall.
A provision of the Trump tax plan would shift some federal tax burden away from lower-tax states to higher ones but the larger plan needs evaluation before we know whether it’s good for Hoosiers overall.
We have a lot to offer Amazon, but our legislature hasn’t done us any favors.
One commentator goes so far as to claim index funds are “worse than Marxism.”
A student’s ability to read impacts their learning in every content area and determines the outcome of every assessment. Every test is first a test on the student’s ability to read.
Perhaps parents who are under 65 but lack insurance should be allowed to be added to their children’s insurance.
Given that many Hoosiers have not recovered from the recession, I argue that we need better jobs, not skewed tax cuts.
Encouraging business investment and accelerating economic growth are always winning strategies. Additional elements of the administration’s proposal bring more benefits for all Hoosier taxpayers.
Thermalin Inc., a Cleveland-based biotech startup that just won $17.5 million in venture capital to develop new insulin therapies, plans to add several researchers to a lab at the Indiana University School of Medicine.
The Indianapolis-based transportation company confirmed something that has been speculated for months: The trucking company is under investigation by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Mentioned as a possible permanent successor to ousted health secretary Tom Price is former Indiana health care policy consultant Seema Verma, a protege of Vice President Mike Pence.
After struggling for more than 20 years to develop cancer drugs without success, West Lafayette-based Endocyte Inc. is pausing it own R&D efforts to concentrate on a potential blockbuster drug from a German chemical company.
The uncovering of the massive NCAA sports scandal started with a troubled financial adviser who wanted to work with football stars, make movies and produce a bit of country music.
Steve Braun says Inquidia Consulting was uniquely qualified to help create the state’s groundbreaking “Demand Driven Workforce System,” which will influence how millions of dollars in training and education money is spent.
The Hoosier state added nearly 9,000 software jobs in a two-year span, notching a 32 percent growth rate that lagged only one other state.
Prices are how resources are directed to their highest valued uses. A higher price says both “use less” and “we want more.”
A sampling of panelists’ conversation at IBJ’s Sept. 21 Health Care & Benefits Power Breakfast.
The startup, founded by serial entrepreneur Don Brown, has hashed out a deal that it gives it access to a broad range of intellectual property.
The Indianapolis-based athletic footwear and apparel retailer also made changes to its board and executive ranks.
Bankruptcies Phoenix Excavating Inc., 141 N. 1000 East, Zionsville, 46077, chapter 7 liquidation, liabilities: $561,949; assets: none. Phoenix Grading Inc., 141 N. 1000 East, Zionsville, 46077, chapter 7 liquidation, liabilities: $511,470; assets: none. Contracts Brooke’s Place and Camp Healing Tree have partnered to help grieving children. For more information, visit www.brookesplace.org. Contact [email protected] Fundraising Happy […]
In a free market, government plays a vital role in enforcing laws against violence, fraud and theft, and in resolving contract disputes.