The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

All Tayside PFI schools have tax haven links

Findings provoke outrage

- GARETH McPherson POLITICAL REPORTER

Every school built in Tayside using a controvers­ial private funding scheme now has links to tax havens, The Courier has learned.

Each of the 24 schools constructe­d under the private finance initiative (PFI) schemes are owned at least in part by investment funds in countries where there are lower tax rates, according to research by an expert in public sector financing.

That means that stakes in the building projects can be packaged into financial commoditie­s and bought and sold for private profit, while the public purse in places like Dundee receives nothing.

The study also found that 60% of Fife’s education buildings are connected to offshore owners.

According to the research, which was used for a BBC investigat­ion, 85% of PFI schools across Scotland are owned in a similar manner.

Dexter Whitfield, an outspoken critic of PFI who has followed the developmen­t of the schemes closely, said: “It’s appalling in my view in the sense that schools, hospitals and roads are increasing­ly being packaged up and treated as financial commoditie­s that are being bought and sold for private profit.

“These commoditie­s are increasing in value but nobody in places like Dundee or anywhere else is seeing any of that value.”

PFI deals, which were introduced by Labour and the Liberal Democrats at Holyrood, involve the private sector providing the upfront cash to build infrastruc­ture such as schools with public authoritie­s paying for it in instalment­s.

They are sometimes referred to as “buy now, pay later” deals, with public bodies having to pay more than the value of the projects to service the debt.

Dundee’s public-private partnershi­p project for six primary and two secondary schools was completed in 2009 and the contract is run by Discovery Education PLC.

A city council spokesman said they are responsibl­e for the management and maintenanc­e of these schools for 30 years under the contract.

The news emerged as the Scottish Government’s balance sheet revealed PFI spending now tops £1 billion.

As well as schools, a series of major infrastruc­ture projects, including a number involving the NHS, are topping up the bill.

SNP MSP Tom Arthur said: “The scale of PFI repayments are now absolutely staggering – showing the sheer incompeten­ce and damaging legacy of the previous Labour and Lib Dem executive.” gmcpherson@thecourier.co.uk

These commoditie­s are increasing in value but nobody in places like Dundee or anywhere else is seeing any of that value. DEXTER WHITFIELD

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