FINANCING THE CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS 265 $500,000 for an administrative office building. This expendi- ture appears justifiable, as the present state capitol cannot house all the boards, bureaus, and commissions of the state government, and the arrangement under which several departments are housed in rented quarters is inconvenient and expensive. A new governor’s mansion at Jefferson City also seems necessary. The one now in use was built in 1872, and engineers have given warning that the building is not safe for the holding of receptions and other large public gatherings. The expenditure of $150,000 for this purpose was recommended by the Commission. For the purpose of this discussion, the expenditures for capital purposes recommended by the State Survey Com- mission are accepted. Before discussing the problems of capital financing more fully it is desirable to consider briefly the expenditures of the state for capital purposes in recent years, with particular reference to the question whether the present capital needs of the state are in the nature of an accumulated deficiency or whether they are such as can conveniently be spread over a considerable period of time. AnaLysis oF Capital ExPENDITURES IN RECENT YEARS In order that the nature of the problem may be fully anderstood, Table 83 is presented. This table shows that -xpenditures for highways in recent years have predominated in the outlays of the state for capital purposes. In 1928 the total capital expenditures of the state government amounted to slightly more than $14.3 million, of which almost $14.1 million were for highways. Capital expendi- tures for all other purposes amounted to only $250,708, or $0.07 per capita, as compared with per capita expenditures of $3.92 for highways. In other words, for every dollar 2xpended for capital additions or improvements to buildings used for educational, penal, eleemosynary, general govern- ment, and other purposes, the state expended approximately $56.00 on account of capital outlays for highways. In 1927 the capital expenditures of the state for other than highway purposes amounted to slightly more than $1 million, the per capita expenditure being $0.28. The capital