The Scotsman

SNP blamed for ‘turbo charged austerity’ blow to local services

- By CHRIS MCCALL chris.mccall@scotsman.com

The scale of the spending cuts faced by local authoritie­s in Scotland has been revealed, with new analysis finding councils have seen a 7.5 per cent drop in their revenue settlement over the past six years.

The reduction is far greater than the equivalent drop faced by Scottish Government in the same period, which saw its revenues cut by 2.8 per cent.

The local government revenue settlement as a proportion of the Scottish Government budget also decreased by 1.7 per cent between 201314 and 2018-19.

The analysis, carried out by the Scottish Parliament Informatio­n Centre (SPICE), prompted Labour to accuse SNP ministers of imposing “turbo-charged austerity” on councils.

But the Scottish Government said that the most recent Holyrood Budget would give the country’s 32 local authoritie­s a real terms increase of 1.2 per cent for spending. Local government­s employ 10 per cent of Scotland’s total workforce but their budgets have faced huge pressure sin recent years.

SPICE found that the greatest reduction in real terms revenue funding per head between 2013-14 and 2019-20 was for Comhairle nan Eilean Siar at £572, while the greatest reduction in real terms revenue funding per head for a wholly mainland authority was Glasgow City Council, which has seen its funding per head reduce by £270.

In a report published ahead of the Budget, Cosla, which represents the interests of Scotland’s councils, said that an extra £549m was required just so local authoritie­s “could stand still”.

Scottish Labour finance spokesman James Kelly said: “The SNP has turbo-charged Tory austerity on councils across the country.

“Instead of using Scotland’s powers to stand up to the Tories, the SNP government has used Holyrood as a conveyer belt for cuts.

“And we know these cuts have been made amid the government sitting on almost half a billion pounds of unspent cash.

“It’s time for Derek Mackay to listen to Scottish Labour and properly fund local services.”

A spokesman for mr mac kay, the Scottish Government’s finance secretary, said: Over the last few weeks labour have accused the SNP government of overspendi­ng our budget, of underspend­ing it – and for not underspend­ing enough.

“The only consistenc­y in Labour’s position is that they don’t have any idea how public finances work.

“Despite a decade of Tory Westminste­r austerity, the SPICE analysis confirms that the 2019-20 Scottish Budget will provide local government with an additional £298.5 million revenue funding, a real terms increase of 1.2 per cent for day to day services.”

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