The Scotsman

‘Independen­ce will stimulate growth and cut £13bn deficit’

●Finance Secretary insists economic strength will offset need for austerity

- By SCOTT MACNAB Political Editor

Scotland’s £13 billion national deficit could be brought under control within a few years of the country becoming independen­t, Finance Secretary Derek Mackay has said.

The SNP minister insisted that leaving the UK will prompt a boost in economic growth that will help address the black hole in the country’s finances without the need for austerity cuts.

Senior Nationalis­ts are actively stepping up the push for a second independen­ce referendum, with first Minister Nicola Sturgeon poised to set out her timetable for another vote in the coming weeks after impasse in the House of Commons over Brexit is resolved.

But opponents have accused the SNP of “fantasy economics”.

Mr Mackay said he hoped delegates would back a motion at next month’s SNP party conference to change policy and commit to a new Scottish currency following independen­ce after using sterling for a transition period.

The party’s recent Sustainabl­e Growth Commission, on which Mr Mackay sat, proposed the new currency would only be adopted after the £13bn deficit – the annual gap between public spending and taxes

raised to fund them – is halved. It estimated this could take between five and ten years.

Asked if this could be done sooner, Mr Mackay said yesterday: “Yes, and I can tell you why. After we published the Growth Commission report, our economy and the financial position was improving. With the powers of independen­ce, yes we can stimulate economic growth, grow our economy, get that notional deficit down.”

Ms Sturgeon has said that the people of Scotland must be offered the choice on independen­ce to provide a longerterm alternativ­e to the chaos of Brexit.

The report by the Sustainabl­e Growth Commission last year proposed curbs on public spending in the fledgling years of a new Scottish state in order to bring down the deficit.

Scotland’s current deficit is £13bn, which is 7.8 per cent of GDP, according to the official Scottish Government figures for 2017-18. The Sustainabl­e Growth Commission estimates the deficit would be 6 per cent at the point of independen­ce and wants to bring this figure down to 3 per cent in line with EU rules, which it estimates would take between five and ten years.

But the SNP insists independen­ce would unshackle the economy and mean enhanced growth, resulting in additional tax revenues that would offset the need for austerity.

The economic case for independen­ce was widely seen as a major weakness in the Yes campaign of 2014.

“We’ve got austerity in Scotland and in the UK because it was the choice of the Conservati­ves – it was a political choice and it’s no longer a necessity,” Mr Mackay said

in an interview yesterday. We can grow our economy, we can grow our public services, we can grow our GDP faster than being part of the UK that is subduing and now endangerin­g our economy.”

He added: “The threat to our economy is Brexit. What we’ve shown is when we look at the small advanced economies in the world to see what they’ve got that we’ve not and what makes them so successful, the answer was independen­ce.

“We could reduce that notional deficit. That’s the deficit for being part of the United Kingdom – accelerate the economic growth. In terms of the currency, move to that independen­t currency when we’re able to do so by setting out the tests that would guide us there.”

An independen­t Scotland would not adopt the euro if it rejoins the EU, Mr Mackay insisted – despite this being Brussels policy for new member states. The SNP pointed to Sweden, which has yet to adopt the single currency after 25 years in the EU.

“It’s not compulsory to join the euro,” Mr Mackay said. “We have the ambition to have an independen­t Scottish currency and set out a plan to take us there.”

But pro-union opponents said the SNP’S plans would be a “recipe for deeper and tougher austerity”.

Murdo Fraser, Scottish Conservati­ve shadow finance secretary said: “This is fantasy

economics from Derek Mackay and the SNP.

“The idea that Scotland’s £13bn deficit can be halved within a few years without austerity is absurd.

“That would either require unpreceden­ted cuts to public services, higher taxes or more borrowing – or more likely a toxic mix of all three.”

Labour leader Richard Leonard said a recent report by the Institute for Fiscal Studies compared the plan for deficit reduction set out in the Sustainabl­e Growth Commission report with Westminste­r Tory austerity of recent years.

“We’ve got austerity in Scotland and in the UK because it was … a political choice and it’s no longer a necessity”

DEREK MACKAY

 ??  ?? 0 Finance Secretary Derek Mackay with First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, who is poised to set out the timetable for a fresh referendum
0 Finance Secretary Derek Mackay with First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, who is poised to set out the timetable for a fresh referendum

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