Talk:Public capital

Latest comment: 8 years ago by Xto 999 in topic "Current State in the U.S."

Removed from article:

"Infrastructural capital is non-natural support systems (e.g. clothing, shelter, roads, PCs) that minimize need for new social trust, instruction, and natural resources." - Hubley, cited in Harding.
Harding, citing Hubley's six styles of capital

because Hubley (a.k.a. 24) was the person who inserted it into the article. Wikipedia is not a place to put your own opinions... Enchanter

Infrastructural capital is not a well-defined term. It could even be considered a neologism. The usual term for what the article describes is physical capital, which does not include natural capital. see eg

"Infrastructural capital which is a broad category of assets that contribute to how an organisation conducts business; such as processes, financial relationships, communication systems, information systems, philosophies, and financial structures (Brooking 1999)." [1]

for a rather different definition (more like social capital). Rd232 18:12, 14 Jan 2005 (UTC)

"Current State in the U.S."

edit

This is not pertinent information to the concept of public capital. This section seems tacked on by an author wishing to soapbox, and should be removed. Xto 999 (talk) 23:02, 17 April 2016 (UTC)Reply