Talk:Public capital

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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]