Fall 2004
Want a nice print copy? |
Business Income Taxes
in Indiana: Who Pays? Calculating Income Tax Liability What Is the Economic Base of This Place? Suburbs Diversify: Population Change in Racial
and Hispanic Composition Diversity by the Numbers:
Population Growth by County, April 2000 to July 2003 |
For the Record
In the last issue of the IBR (Summer 2004), we exulted that the American Community Survey (ACS) would begin full implementation nationwide and throughout all Indiana counties this fall. Well, we spoke too soon. The ACS is in jeopardy. Full funding for implementing this long-awaited and congressionally (and budget) driven method of providing consistent and more frequent long-form data to Americans is being siphoned away for other causes, the worthiness of which I am not judging. However, if America is to embrace the knowledge economy, it also needs to support the very knowledge we need for our communities in order to stay relevant and plan strategically.
Some may say it is “just data.” But it isn’t. It is the foundation for thousands of daily business, government and education decisions. It is the basis on which we evaluate the effectiveness of our government spending, determine the most needy of our citizens or communities, and target resources rather than shooting at them with blinders on. Data—and census data in particular—are the keystone of our knowledge economy. That keystone may be unwittingly yanked out. Further information on this issue can be found at www.sdcbidc.iupui.edu. —COR