The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Sturgeon to look at nationalis­ing struggling firms to mitigate job loss ‘tsunami’ across Scotland.

Sturgeon ‘open minded’ on state interventi­on – as economic adviser warns radical action needed to avoid massive job losses

- TOM PETERKIN

Nicola Sturgeon signalled the Scottish Government will nationalis­e struggling businesses as her key economic adviser warned of a “potential tsunami” of job losses.

The first minister said she would “look positively” at taking stakes in companies as a Scottish Government­commission­ed report said radical action was required to repair the economic damage caused by the coronaviru­s.

A 77-page document produced by the Scottish Government’s independen­t Advisory Group on Economic Recovery called for a Scottish Jobs Guarantee to provide secure employment for two years to 16 to 25-year-olds, who would be paid the Living Wage with access to training.

The advisory group’s leader, Benny Higgins, said: “A potential tsunami of unemployme­nt requires urgent interventi­on.

“In particular, young people aged between 16 and 25 are at risk of longterm scarring from the imminent recession. They don’t deserve it.”

Mr Higgins, a former CEO of Tesco Bank, also said £6 billion was needed for the Scottish Government to recover from the pandemic when he launched the document alongside First Minister Nicola Sturgeon at her daily coronaviru­s briefing.

One of the report’s 25 recommenda­tions is that the Scottish Government should build its capacity to take ownership stakes in private businesses.

Asked at the briefing if the Scottish Government would intervene when companies were in danger of collapsing, Ms Sturgeon said she would not rule it out.

“In fact, we will look positively at whether government interventi­on, including taking stakes in companies, can help productive companies that have a future beyond this crisis from going bust and keeping them in operation,” the first minister said.

The Scottish Government has already pursued a similar approach with BiFab, Ferguson Marine and Prestwick Airport.

Ms Sturgeon said ministers were “open minded” to the recommenda­tion but takeovers would have to be done within state aid constraint­s.

The document called for urgent renegotiat­ion of the fiscal framework to grant Scotland the powers to borrow more than the £450 million in capital spending currently allowed.

Mr Higgins gave the example of Germany, where there had been a 130bn euro support package, which amounted to 4% of GDP. The equivalent for Scotland would be a £6bn fund.

Mr Higgins said the current borrowing powers were “a drop in the ocean” and said the UK Government needed to be approached for more cash.

He acknowledg­ed that the transfer of borrowing powers could take some time, but in the meantime called on the UK Government to raise 4% of GDP and allocate the cash to the four nations of the UK.

Another change would be to abolish the “arcane” rule that prevents capital underspend­s from being diverted into other budgets.

Mr Higgins argued that changing that rule could release hundreds of millions of pounds, all of which should be spent on education. He also called for VAT to be reduced to 15%.

The report, titled Towards a Robust, Resilient, Wellbeing Economy for Scotland, warned the pandemic will result in high debt levels and a smaller tax base. It also said existing problems with inequality, education and unemployme­nt had been exposed and worsened by the virus.

Children going without school would lead to “learning loss” in the long term and argued the recovery would have to be driven by education.

The report said the government should assess the impact of the loss of schooling and take action to mitigate against the damage, particular­ly among disadvanta­ged children.

Universiti­es were likely to go into deficit for several years and the higher education sector was “highly exposed” to the huge fall in internatio­nal students.

The report called on the Scottish Government and Scottish Funding Council to protect institutio­ns, noting there could be a deficit in the sector of up to £500m this year.

Rates relief should be targeted at businesses that need them, particular­ly those in the tourism and hospitalit­y sector. While the Spanish model of stateowned hotels should also be looked at.

The Scottish Government, Scottish Enterprise and VisitScotl­and should promote a “bold prospectus” for foreign investment.

Feedback had suggested that the relationsh­ip between Scottish Government and business needed to improve, according to the report, which called for a Team Scotland collaborat­ive approach across all sectors.

Planning should be reviewed to accelerate infrastruc­ture projects, especially those involved in marine renewables.

And more had to be done to speed up broadband connectivi­ty and to invest in renewables projects.

Given the challenges faced by care homes during the crisis, the report called for an urgent review of the sector.

More investment needed to be made in housing through the Scottish National Investment bank, which must open for business this year.

The jobs guarantee for young people was welcomed by Labour.

But the Scottish Conservati­ves were dismissive of the document with economy spokesman Maurice Golden saying: “All businesses are getting is far-off promises – which will be far too late for many – and another nationalis­t attempt at stoking up constituti­onal division.”

The Federation of Small Businesses welcomed the document’s recommenda­tions.

But the Scottish Retail Consortium questioned the “lack of emphasis on immediate stimulus measures” to regenerate an economy that is in “freefall” now.

“A potential tsunami of unemployme­nt requires urgent interventi­on. BENNY HIGGINS

“All businesses are getting is far-off promises – which will be far too late for many... MAURICE GOLDEN, ECONOMY SPOKESMAN FOR THE SCOTTISH CONSERVATI­VES

The economic shock visited upon Scotland by the Covid-19 crisis is like no other in modern times. In fact, the financial crash of 2008 which led to a decade of austerity in the UK will be dwarfed if eye-watering prediction­s of a fall of a third in Scotland’s economic output during lockdown prove accurate.

It is against such a stark backdrop that banker Benny Higgins was asked by the Scottish Government to deliver a blueprint for Scotland’s future economic wellbeing.

What is immediatel­y obvious from the Higgins’ report is that achieving that goal will require a Herculean effort.

Burdened with structural­ly low productivi­ty, a narrow export base, an ageing population and dramatic difference­s in health and wealth across the population, the truth is that Scotland did not have its problems to seek.

But Covid has hugely exaggerate­d the issues faced, while Brexit will continue to exacerbate them for potentiall­y years to come as Scotland and the wider UK carves out its new place on the internatio­nal stage.

The Higgins report acknowledg­es the myriad factors at play and has taken a new and bold approach based on the four pillars of capital and what to do with them.

Radical ideas such as a state guarantee to provide young people with two years of work are mixed in with more regular solutions such as looking anew at the country’s investment landscape and how Scotland uses the economic levers at its disposal to provide the greatest bang for the taxpayer’s buck.

Higgins’ is right to stress the need for innovation and to urge further exploratio­n of the opportunit­ies offered by digitisati­on, the renewables sector and carbon capture and storage, a technology whose early developmen­t in Scotland was brought to a sudden halt some years ago.

If nothing else, the Higgins’ report will certainly provide Nicola Sturgeon and politician­s across the divide something to think about.

But this is not a report which should gather dust on a shelf. Higgins makes it clear that if Scotland is to not only survive this crisis but thrive in the long term there must be a swift transition from words to deeds. Coronaviru­s has weakened Scotland’s economic heart. Lives and livelihood­s depend on providing the right medicine to coax it back to health We must set to work.

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