The Sunday Post (Inverness)

SNP PLAN FOR SCOTTISH POUND

Party’s new independen­ce blueprint will back currency

- By A ndrew Picken APICKEN@SUNDAYPOST.COM

The SNP’S new blueprint for independen­ce will include plans for a Scottish currency, we can reveal.

A Scottish pound is part of the strategy drafted by the party’s Economic Growth Commission.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon will publish its report on Friday after asking for economic strategies to convince voters in any future independen­ce referendum.

One source said: “This report will influence the debate for months and years to come.”

The creation of a Scottish currency will be at the centre of a new blueprint for independen­ce to be launched by the SNP within days

The First Minister is expected to unveil the long-awaited Growth Commission paper on Friday, detailing economic building blocks for an independen­t Scotland.

It is understood the 400-page document will support a gradual move towards a Scottish currency if voters back independen­ce in a second referendum. Observers believe the UK Government’s decision to rule out a currency union after independen­ce damaged the Yes campaign in 2014.

The Commission’s plan would see Scotland continue to use the pound on the first day of separation but on an unofficial basis. There would then be a transition period to a new Scottish currency, initially pegged to Sterling.

The Commission, led by former MSP turned public relations director Andrew Wilson, is also expected to back a ‘golden visa’ drive to attract wealthy investors to settle in Scotland, while the tax laws would be simplified with tougher penalties for those cheating the system. Despite Scots voting to reject independen­ce in 2014, Ms Sturgeon has said another referendum is still on the table. She has said she will make her mind up in the autumn on another poll once there is a clearer picture on the Brexit negotiatio­ns. The Growth Commission was launched in 2016 when another referendum looked imminent in the wake of Britain voting to leave the EU. Commentato­rs have speculated that the lengthy wait for publicatio­n of the report came after a surge in support for independen­ce expected by the SNP failed to materialis­e.

One source close to the Growth Commission said: “It is a proper body of work that will inform thinking for the months and years ahead.

“It acknowledg­es that Scotland’s economy is not firing on all cylinders and maps out how we can address that once we have the full powers of an independen­t country.

“Lessons have been learned from the 2014 White Paper on independen­ce.” A decisive moment in the 2014 referendum campaign was when the Chancellor George Osborne ruled out a formal currency union which would have allowed an independen­t Scotland to officially use the pound, backed by the Bank of England.

It’s understood the Commission favours a gradual approach to the issue, where Scotland continues to use the pound on an unofficial basis until a future Scottish Government decides it is time to switch over to a Scottish currency. It is expected this, undefined, transition period would be used to create the institutio­ns needed for such a move like a central bank.

Another strand to the report – which is understood to be split into three sections; growth, public finances, and monetary policy – is immigratio­n.

It is expected the Commission will back efforts to grow the population and one aspect will be so-called ‘golden visas’. The UK Government currently runs a scheme where people from outside the EU are offered the right to live in this country if they invest anywhere between £2m and £10m in our economy.

Such initiative­s are common around the world and it is being suggested that Scotland could essentiall­y undercut the UK scheme to attract people who are willing to move here to invest or set up businesses. Labour economy spokeswoma­n Jackie Baillie said: “The SNP’S Growth Commission is expected to reboot the economic case for independen­ce. It needs to reboot the economic argument for the SNP staying in power.

“SNP Ministers may claim that the fundamenta­ls of our economy are strong – but for too many Scots our economy is broken with low wages and insecure work.”

An SNP spokesman said: “We look forward to the publicatio­n of the Growth Commission’s report and to its recommenda­tions on how Scotland can make the most of its economic potential with independen­ce.”

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 ??  ?? The First Minister’s Growth Commission will recommend a Scottish pound
The First Minister’s Growth Commission will recommend a Scottish pound
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