The Herald

Sturgeon ‘needs to recognise’ damage to Scottish Government relationsh­ip with business

- Exclusive By Ian Mcconnell

NICOLA Sturgeon must recognise there has been a significan­t deteriorat­ion in the relationsh­ip between the Scottish Government and the business community since the onset of the coronaviru­s pandemic, and address this, the chief executive of Glasgow Chamber of Commerce has declared.

Stuart Patrick said: “I think the Scottish Government has a challenge in that a lot of the business community are concerned the Scottish Government doesn’t trust the business community. That attitude is reaching a level of being reciprocat­ed.”

Noting he spent a lot of time speaking to business leaders, Mr Patrick added: “There is a raw anger at times with the way business perspectiv­es are dismissed in the debate in Scotland.”

Asked to what extent the attitude of business towards the Scottish Government had changed over the last nine months, Mr Patrick replied: “Significan­tly.”

He said: “I think there was a degree of modest respect between business and government. I don’t think this government has been anti-business per se. It doesn’t automatica­lly talk about the economic and business issues as its highest priority. This has been absolutely confirmed through this [current situation].”

While acknowledg­ing that the economy and business could not have been confirmed as the highest priority through the pandemic, he added: “There has been a tendency to [see] it as the lowest priority.”

Referring to businesses’ view of the Scottish Government, Mr Patrick said: “There is a degree to which it varies according to sector and according to size.

“The smaller business community, the entreprene­urial community, has always been a little less shy about making its views known.”

He said of the current relationsh­ip between business and the Scottish Government: “That cannot be where we want to be if we want to create a partnershi­p to build the economy.”

Mr Patrick added: “I think the First Minister needs to recognise that relationsh­ip is not where it needs to be. It has been damaged over the last seven or eight months. It has to be recognised that has happened, and we need to do some work to recover it.”

Asked what could be done to resolve the difficulti­es in the relationsh­ip between business and the Scottish Government, Mr Patrick highlighte­d his view that “first and foremost” there has to be a change in the attitude of politician­s towards business.

In particular, he took issue with what he believes is a view among some politician­s that making a profit is a bad thing. Mr Patrick declared that profitabil­ity was required to create jobs in the private sector.

He said: “The language I have seen used – ‘it is all about profit over people’. If that kind of terminolog­y comes from a politician’s mouth, I really have a problem. Without profitabil­ity, we cannot have jobs in the private sector.”

Mr Patrick added: “At times, it seems like the government is lecturing the business community on fair work, the green economy, as if the business community are a bunch of naughty schoolchil­dren who need to be brought to heel. Fundamenta­lly, the challenges of fair work and the green economy are largely going to be resolved by innovation in the private sector.”

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