>From the RC party in the UK, allied with the Conservatives:
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"The chancellor looks set to use next week's Autumn Statement to
switch some day-to-day spending to spending more on Britain's
infrastructure - in the jargon moving some spending from current to
capital projects.

His deputy, the Chief secretary to the Treasury, Danny Alexander, said
today in a speech that "next week's announcement will switch funds to
capital spending plans".

Ministers have already suggested that they want to find ways to use
Britain's low long-term interest rates to underwrite private sector
investment in roads, broadband and other infrastructure, which will
increase Britain's long term growth rate.

At the Liberal Democrat conference, Danny Alexander announced the
creation of a new half a billion pound infrastructure fund paid for
from under-spending of departmental budgets.

One source close to the decision said of the funding switch: "It is
undoubtedly significant. It will mean essentially extra spending on
infrastructure. It does not mean more borrowing. But we are switching
some money from one side to the other."

In September, I revealed that some Liberal Democrats believed up to £5
billion more could be spent on infrastructure. The key to their
argument was that the government's deficit rules allow capital
spending to be increased without abandoning Plan A as the Treasury's
so-called "fiscal mandate" targets current not capital spending.

Their other target - a fall in the debt-to-GDP ratio - limits their
ability to spend more on capital projects unless the Treasury is
prepared to argue that it can stimulate growth in the future by
spending more now."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-15882970
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True RC thinking... looking outside of the big-small government
argument and, instead, using your tools to maximize the effectiveness
of the private sector.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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