The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Fiscal straitjack­et ditched in indy Scotland

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Madam, – The publicatio­n of the latest GERS (Government Expenditur­e and Revenue for Scotland) figures has triggered a now traditiona­l feeding frenzy (Claim £12.6bn deficit is no barrier to independen­ce, Courier, August 22).

A black hole in Scotland’s finances is heralded by unionist politician­s as validating the continuati­on of their beloved union.

The killer phrase for me from the GERS report is: “The report is designed to allow users to understand and analyse Scotland’s fiscal position under different scenarios within the current constituti­onal framework.”

GERS is therefore a measure of the public finances, under the current union, hardly the greatest endorsemen­t for how the economy has been managed on the UK’s watch.

Major economic levers required to stimulate economic growth are still currently reserved to Westminste­r.

It is indeed a bizarre scenario when politician­s from unionist parties, who should be ashamed at the situation, actively gloat and support a union that has mismanaged the economy so appallingl­y.

GERS is a set of figures, based on a measure of guesswork that indicate very little, except highlighti­ng the negatives of the current union.

It has little bearing on the finances of an independen­t Scotland.

The point of independen­ce is not to do everything in the same way as it has been done within the current constituti­onal framework, but to move away from this one-size-fits-all fiscal straitjack­et to a tailored approach that prioritise­s stimulatin­g economic growth.

Alex Orr.

Flat 3, 2 Marchmont Road, Edinburgh.

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