The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Holyrood seeks £80bn UK-wide stimulus boost

Scottish Government says financial help needed to revitalise Covid-hit economy

- LAURA PATERSON

An £80 billion UK-wide stimulus package should be put in place to boost the coronaviru­s-hit economy and cut inequaliti­es, the Scottish Government has said.

A new report calls for the UK Government to use the cash – equivalent to 4% of GDP – to finance a range of actions, including cutting VAT to 15% for six months once lockdown ends, with a reduction to 5% for the hospitalit­y sector.

Further recommenda­tions in the Scottish Government report include cutting employers’ national insurance contributi­ons by 2p to reduce the cost of hiring staff.

It repeats calls for a furlough scheme extension, or some other form of wage subsidy, for the hardest-hit sectors, indicating that while the unemployme­nt rate could still reach 10% in Scotland in 2020, it could have peaked at 14% without the furlough scheme.

The Covid-19: UK Fiscal Path – A New Approach report also recommends introducin­g a jobs guarantee scheme for young people and creating a national debt plan to help businesses and households recover.

Among the help for households is a call to provide a one-off cash grant to low and middle income households to stimulate consumptio­n, giving the example of Germany’s 300 euro (£274) per child.

The report states the UK Government’s current and proposed fiscal rules “are not designed for, or able to support, recovery from this crisis” and calls for major change.

It recommends adopting new fiscal rules which prioritise economic stimulus over deficit reduction in times of crisis, building in an escape clause and a public net worth objective.

The report calls on the UK Government to overhaul the welfare system, removing the benefit cap, scrapping the two-child limit and replacing advance payments for Universal Credit with non-repayable hardship grants.

A further recommenda­tion is to extend Scotland’s financial powers to allow it to shape its own response to the pandemic.

Scotland’s finance secretary, Kate Forbes, said the pandemic is the “biggest economic shock of our lifetimes”, adding: “The UK Government’s fiscal policies are still key in determinin­g our budget, so today we set out the principles we believe it should follow to ensure we emerge with a fairer, greener economy that values wellbeing alongside growth.

“This report recommends bold, practical steps which would provide an immediate boost to our economy, protect jobs and deliver new ones.”

 ?? Picture: Fraser Bremner. ?? Scottish Finance Secretary Kate Forbes.
Picture: Fraser Bremner. Scottish Finance Secretary Kate Forbes.

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