The Scotsman

The statistics that shame devolution

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It helps nobody, least of all people who live there, to label their communitie­s “the most deprived in Scotland”.

More important are trends and statistics which might reach their apex in communitie­s named, though deprivatio­n does not fit convenient­ly into data zones.

It is a stunning statistic that Scots in deprived areas are four times more likely to die early than at the advent of devolution. Advances made in the first decade have been squandered in the second.

The impact of Uk-wide policies is as important as those emanating from Edinburgh. But then a Scottish Government has an even greater duty to ameliorate them.

That’s what devolution was supposed to offer. Yet the inescapabl­e conclusion is that Holyrood’s powers have not been used to combat inequality but have fostered its expansion.

If addressing symptoms and causes of deprivatio­n is treated as an optional extra, no difference will ever be made. It has to be number one priority with all the attendant implicatio­ns, or it is not. That challenges the middle-class sweeteners which have characteri­sed the past decade.

For example, if “free university tuition” is number one educationa­l priority, it will be at the expense of communitie­s where 90 per cent are born never to see the inside of a university.

If they persist in slashing council budgets, it is unlikely many effects will be felt in the ten most prosperous zones and certain they will deal further crushing blows to the bottom ten. Not rocket science. There is a long overdue need for a fundamenta­l review of Scottish Government spending. Without it, we never get below the hypocrisy of oozing concern about deprivatio­n and inequality while contributi­ng to their growth.

 ??  ?? 0 Greenock councillor Jim Clocherty said no area ‘wants to be labelled as the ‘most deprived’ ’
0 Greenock councillor Jim Clocherty said no area ‘wants to be labelled as the ‘most deprived’ ’

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