How to fix America's debt problem
Robert A. Cropf says spending cuts and revenue increases must combine to restore budgetary sanity.
Robert A. Cropf says spending cuts and revenue increases must combine to restore budgetary sanity.
Robert A. Cropf examines to use of social media in the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt.
A Brookings-Pew study finds that the culture wars receded in the face of economic woes. But Robert Cropf notes they did not go away, and views of religion present major divides.
Bills before the Missouri General Assembly would radically alter the state's tax structure by doing away with the state's individual and corporate income taxes and the earnings tax in St. Louis and Kansas City. Robert Cropf looks at how people
The cost of the proposal to expand health-insurance coverage is likely to be between $1 trillion and $1.5 trillion over 10 years. Meeting that cost won't be made by finding "waste, fraud and abuse" but, Robert Cropf says, by streamlining the way
The city earnings tax comes in for regular criticism. But how else does St. Louis afford to provide services for a workforce that draws the majority of its employees from beyond the city limits? Robert Cropf and Rob Ryan look at alternatives and
Ending the Missouri corporate and individual income taxes might sound like a good idea. But Prof. Robert Cropf points out that the proposal is designed to be revenue neutral, so the sales tax rate would likely grow and would apply to all types
The Missouri Budget Project says the state will receive more than $4.3 billion over the next two year. Professor Robert A. Cropf says Missourians should also focus on the multiplier effect and should urged their legislators to accept every
Barack Obama's use of the phrase "spread the wealth around" has been seized by John McCain's campaign as being socialistic. But the Democrat is simply proposing tax credits, which have long been part of the Republican play book.