He says if it were down to him, he'd scrap the defence budget and reallocate it.
From the guardian.co.uk
The drawdown meant we had to release advisors quickly, and reallocate resources.
From the smallwarsjournal.com
The union suggested that the county reallocate the money in next year's budget.
From the washingtonpost.com
Some automatically reallocate your investments, based on when you plan to retire.
From the usatoday.com
What you all-in-one-basket investors have in common is the need to reallocate.
From the chron.com
Not surprisingly, women were more likely than men to reallocate time to housework.
From the economix.blogs.nytimes.com
McGavick said XL has completed 70 percent of a plan to reallocate investments.
From the bloomberg.com
Those losses meant that the department could not accurately reallocate space.
From the newsobserver.com
They will be used to reallocate states'seats in the House of Representatives.
From the usatoday.com
More examples
Reapportion: allocate, distribute, or apportion anew; "Congressional seats are reapportioned on the basis of census data"
(reallocation) a share that has been allocated again
To change the user or purpose for which a resource is allocated; To allocate again
(Reallocation) reassignment by the Director of Personnel of a position from one classification to a different classification on the basis of a significant change in the kind or level of duties and responsibilities assigned to the position.
(Reallocation) An exchange among investment options within an annuity that effects the distribution of investment options across the entire annuity.
(Reallocation) Redistributing assets among options.
(Reallocation) The term used to describe the procedure of moving an expense (including payroll) from one index to another or from one account code to another to correct clerical or bookkeeping errors.
(Reallocation) Transfer of money from one case payment to one or more other cases in a lender's portfolio.