The amusing thing I find about all of this is that whenever government spends money it speaks of “investment”. Most of government spending (and this is a prime example) is no more an investment than if I were to stand in the rain tearing up £50 notes. Despite their assurances to the contrary this money will never be regained by the taxpayer.
As to where the money is coming from – it is simply being printed. Of course there is the disguise of “gilts” and “government backed bonds” but effectively all this government is doing, having run out of the real stuff, is printing funny money (aka “quantitative easing”).
Everybody knows what happens when the supply of something becomes more plentiful – it simply becomes a less valuable commodity. And so it is with money. This government has recently injected £175bn into the economy, plans to do more of the same, and every one of those phoney pounds devalues the currency. The cost of this devaluation (in the form of inflation and a weaker pound) will be paid for years to come, long after the current bunch (and probably the next bunch too) of charlatans has shuffled off to newly created jobs in the ever-expanding EU monster.
Yes, there was a “global” financial crisis last year (as Brown continually tells us). But the UK ran out of real money long before that happened due to profligacy and the illusion of “growth” (funded by funny money) and we will not recover as readily as other nations.