The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Record financial deficit ‘no obstacle’ for independen­ce

- ANDY PHILIP

Adeficit of £36 billion in Scotland’s finances has not undermined the case for independen­ce, according to Finance Secretary Kate Forbes.

The senior SNP minister said the gap between revenue and spending should pose no obstacle to pushing the case for full powers in Edinburgh.

The Highland MSP’s comments sparked another row with pro-union politician­s who claim Scotland has been helped through a devastatin­g pandemic thanks to the wider UK.

The latest annual report on government expenditur­e and revenue shows the gap in the balance sheet rose from 8.6% before the pandemic to 22.4% in 2020-21. It compares with around 14% across the UK.

Asked what this means for the SNP’s referendum push, Ms Forbes said the pandemic “strengthen­s” Scotland’s hand in calling for more powers.

She also claimed Scotland’s finances are “engineered” to be reliant on the UK Treasury, giving an unclear picture for a financial analysis of independen­ce.

“It is not an obstacle to making the case for independen­ce,” she said in a Scottish Government briefing on the latest set of figures.

“Deficits across the world have risen exponentia­lly and having the highest deficit in Europe does not seem to be an obstacle to the UK Government being independen­t. The same argument would apply to us.”

Ms Forbes said people “assume” the UK Government will manage their deficit down, suggesting it would be no different for Scotland as an independen­t state.

“That is what countries around the world are doing,” she said.

“There is a strengthen­ed argument to grow our economy.

“I can only go so far without the full levers at our control.”

Conservati­ves seized on the annual snapshot to promote the value of the UK Treasury and government.

Tory MP Alister Jack, the UK Government Scottish Secretary, said: “We have been able to weather the Covid storm as part of the UK but we now face the challenge of rebuilding our economy and supporting our heroic NHS and other public services. Our focus remains on that task.

“We have faced a terrible crisis far, far stronger as one UK – and we will build back better as one UK.”

Scottish Labour deputy leader Jackie Baillie said pushing for a referendum now is “reckless”.

She said: “The additional £1,828 spent per person in Scotland compared to the rest of the UK is what goes to maintainin­g the schools, transport and NHS on which we all rely.

“The ongoing economic fallout of the pandemic and the unanswered question of separation remain the largest long-term economic threats to Scotland’s prosperity.”

 ??  ?? REFERENDUM PUSH: SNP finance secretary says Scotland’s finances are engineered to be reliant on the UK Treasury.
REFERENDUM PUSH: SNP finance secretary says Scotland’s finances are engineered to be reliant on the UK Treasury.

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