The Scotsman

Derek Mackay’s Robin Hood budget could bring him an arrow in the back

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SNP Finance Secretary Derek Mackay’s budget proposals mean middle and higher income earners in Scotland will continue to pay more income tax than elsewhere in the UK.

While everyone earning over £33,000 will decidedly pay more here, the amounts aren’t massive, at least for middle income earners – so why bother?

The generosity of the Barnett Formula has long allowed more to be spent on public services north of the Border – not SNP tax tinkering. The reality is that Mr Mackay simply adheres to the nationalis­t party line of making anything they touch different to the rest of the UK, merely for the sake of manufactur­ing a difference.

So, if indyref2 were ever to happen, cue Nicola Sturgeon inevitably constructi­ng a narrative that pretty much everything is divergent already in Scotland – independen­ce just rubber stamps matters.

If you’re a dyed-in-the-wool nationalis­t you’ll nod approvingl­y – the rest of us marvel at the petty pointlessn­ess of it all. Mr Mackay’s tax tinkering is a fiscal equivalent of adding Gaelic to road signs – different to England yet essentiall­y futile.

MARTIN REDFERN Woodcroft Road , Edinburgh

Finance Minister Derek Mackay is sticking to his guns with a determinat­ion to rob the rich and give to the poor in Scotland with the highest personal taxation system in the UK.

This in addition

to the crippling commercial taxes introduced could well be the straw that will break the back ofthescott­isheconomy,which is currently in the doldrums.

Derek Mackay should be warned that while pioneering a punitive taxation system for Scotland may make him popular in the SNP party, it is the pioneers that end up with arrows in their backs. DENNIS FORBES GRATTAN

Bucksburn, Aberdeen

Mr Mackay is being true to form and simply carrying on regardless with the SNP’S desire to close attainment gaps artificial­ly ( ‘Mackay’s budget moves on tax will hit middle earners’, Scotsman, December 13.)

This budget is obviously counterpro­ductiveasi­tcannot stimulatet­heeconomy,merely depress it, so where is the logic in running a taxation system based simply on the stick with no carrot being dangled?

Joined-up thinking is not the forte of the SNP, hence the myriad previous failed and abandoned policies and the lack of progress in education and the health service.

This budget fails to address these fundamenta­l problems by making recruiting badly-needed senior staff even harder to do.

As the next Holyrood elections are now coming that much closer, the negative results of this budget will take on a big electoral significan­ce. Mr Mackay has obviously not factored that into his calculatio­ns.

DR GERALD EDWARDS

Broom Road, Glasgow

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