The Scotsman

The best currency for Scotland is obvious

Thanks to Brexit we now know beyond all doubt that chaos would follow a vote for independen­ce, writes John Mclellan BBC, if not Martin, still has reasons to wince The world’s biggest scoop of journalist­s

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Like so many of the best catchphras­es, Prime Minister Harold Wilson didn’t actually say “The pound in your pocket will not be affected”, but it stuck. What he told the nation in a 1967 TV broadcast when sterling was devalued by 14 per cent was “The pound here in Britain, in your pocket, your purse or bank account, will not be devalued”. Same difference.

The internatio­nal currency markets might matter little to the general public other than at holiday time, but upheaval with something as fundamenta­l as money not only creates havoc for the economy but saps public confidence in politician­s like nothing else. Wilson never recovered and duly lost the 1970 general election to a Conservati­ve Party whose leader Ted Heath could hardly be described as inspiratio­nal.

Then in 1997 the economy was starting to motor, but it did nothing to save John Major who never recovered from the ignominy of Black Wednesday in 1992 when Britain tumbled out of the Exchange Rate Mechanism as the pound became the plaything of currency speculator­s like George Soros. So too, it could be argued, was Gordon Brown doomed from the moment RBS chairman Sir Tom Mckillop picked up the phone to Chancellor Alistair Darling in October 2008 to tell him they were bust and effectivel­y the entire British banking system was hours from collapse.

The political importance of financial confidence was not lost on Mr Darling and when private polling in advance of the 2014 independen­ce referendum showed financial instabilit­y was a massive concern for a clear majority of Scottish voters, he played the currency card for all it was worth. With all the UK parties ruling out a currency share, Darling pressed the SNP to reveal their plan B, knowing full well that the only credible Plan B, an independen­t Scottish currency, would scare the bejaysus out of far more voters than it would attract.

In an attempt to solve the conundrum for a future referendum, the SNP’S Growth Commission headed by EX-MSP and RBS economist Andrew Wilson last year proposed a transition period during which Scotland’s £13bn deficit would be halved before moving to a new currency, which has the triple benefit for Unionists of first promising maximum austerity, then currency upheaval and a bitter row amongst grassroots Nationalis­ts along the way.

Finance Secretary Derek Mackay and SNP deputy leader Keith Brown have now put a motion to the party’s spring conference to make the adoption of a new currency after independen­ce official policy, and although this has been welcomed by some as clearing up the confusion which dogged the Yes campaign it doesn’t make it any more palatable. Plan B was never publicly acknowledg­ed because the SNP strategist­s knew as well as Better Together that a new currency was a turn-off and nothing suggests attitudes have changed. But if there is ever to be a re-run of 2014 it makes the choice much more stark.

Thanks to Brexit we now know beyond all doubt that political and economic chaos would follow a vote for independen­ce, and to that would be added the prospect of an untried currency and a government with no track record of financial prudence. The new government’s borrowing would be cripplingl­y expensive and it’s against this sort of background that an audience of about 200 business types and politician­s gathered this week at the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Conference Centre to hear about the proposed re-establishm­ent of a Scottish stock exchange by accountant and entreprene­ur Tomas Carruthers.

Business-minded Nationalis­ts such as ex-mp Michelle Thomson, ex-enterprise minister Jim Mather and Edinburgh Lord Provost Frank Ross are prominent among its supporters – and they see a stock exchange as a vital institutio­n in the developmen­t of an independen­t economy. But while the Growth Commission report was referenced in an accompanyi­ng 36-page prospectus, passages on Scotland’s economic future made no reference to a new currency.

Scottish stock exchanges existed for hundreds of years, gradually drawn together for efficiency into a single Scottish Stock exchange which was then absorbed into the London exchange in 1973 and, while the ultimate aim might be to construct a component of future statehood, its success or failure does not so much depend on political independen­ce but on offering something different (in this case a focus on renewable energy) and on its ability to raise capital and generate profitable investment.

The 2014 independen­ce blueprint “Scotland’s Future” made no mention of a stock exchange and it was commented on at the time that it would be strange for an independen­t country not to have its own exchange. It does not follow that an exchange needs an independen­t country, but it certainly needs a reliable currency with which to trade. That would be the pound. BBC Scotland news magazine anchor Martin Geissler was quick to tweet after my observatio­n last week that I was sure I saw him wince at some of what was going on around him in the first editions of his show The Nine.

“For info I wasn’t wincing. Proud to be involved in the project ... A fresh, exciting programme, I reckon,” he wrote. Fair enough, but I wonder if he winced when the audience estimates for the first week came through, fluctuatin­g from around 12,000 to 24,000.

Up-to-the-minute figures aren’t publicly available and the BBC is probably not going to provide a running commentary.

But with a £7m budget and 80 new journalist­s, they might think twice about sniffy reports heralding the demise of the Scottish newspaper industry every time hard copy circulatio­n figures are published. People actually have to buy newspapers, not just switch on the box. Someone who knows all about the BBC is its former Director General Mark Thompson, who left in 2012 after eight years at the helm to become chief executive of the New York Times.

He’ll be just across the water from BBC Scotland’s HQ in June when he is appearing at the World Associatio­n of Newspapers’ annual congress at the SECC, the first time the event has been held in the UK. First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt are also expected at what will be the most significan­t gathering of publishers and journalist­s in Britain for many years.

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