I welcome to the committee Professor David Bell, from the University of Stirling, who is here to help us with our inquiry into European funding. He will build on some of the work that we have undertaken, although there are specific issues with which we hope Professor Bell can help us. I do not think that we require comments from John Bachtler at this stage, so I will ask Professor Bell to make a brief presentation. We have some specific questions for him after that.
Thank you for the invitation to address the committee.
We have circulated copies of the slides, so people should have before them the graphic image to which you are referring.
I am concerned that the grey has vanished entirely from the screen.
Thank you very much, Professor Bell. That has been a useful overview. Members will have specific questions to ask. I know that Bruce Crawford has a question. The committee is also interested in transparency, ring-fencing and the impact on net expenditure levels.
Thank you, Professor Bell. That was useful in helping us to understand the whole subject. I would like to address transparency and the impact on net overall public expenditure, whether ring-fencing is an advantage or a disadvantage, with regard to EU structural funds, and the impact on the assigned budget.
It is difficult to make that assertion because, as I said, the Barnett formula rolls on and no specific provision is made for European decisions that are made in Brussels about what Scotland should get on a year-to-year basis. You might wish to argue that the appropriate place to make that step adjustment is through the comprehensive spending review, as the Welsh are doing. The CSR gives ministers the opportunity to examine their commitments and to make a case to the Treasury that a new level of spending is appropriate for whatever territory ministers are responsible for.
I do not want to put words into your mouth, but are you saying that it would be difficult to argue that one could properly describe the EU structural funds that come into Scotland as additional to the Scottish assigned budget?
This is a murky and complicated area. The CSR provides an opportunity to demonstrate clear additionality, but if Scotland gets more money on the year-to-year basis, that will be because a programme in England has increased its funding on the basis of decisions made by the UK Parliament. That carries forward into the Scottish budget.
If it is difficult to see the impact on net overall expenditure, what is your view of the concept of ring-fencing of EU structural funds? If there is no impact on the net overall assigned budget—
Can we come back to that question? We should stick to the impact on net overall expenditure. I will come back to ring-fencing.
Is Scotland a net contributor?
Do you mean a net contributor to the overall budget?
Yes.
I visited that question a long time ago, when I argued that that was the case. Now, the case is less clear.
But our GDP per head is absolutely dead average.
Yes.
Before I allow Allan Wilson to come in, I wish to stick to the subject of overall expenditure levels. Clearly, politicians are not responsible for what ends up in newspapers, but the suggestion that led to the inquiry was that, because of the way in which funding was accounted, between £500 million and £800 million of European funding, which Scotland should have received, had been removed or stolen from it—I cannot remember the exact words. Do you have any evidence that such money has been removed from our control or spending ability?
I have no direct evidence on that. Clearly, Scotland's share of European structural funds has been falling. That has happened on the basis of discussions that take place between the Department of Trade and Industry and the European Commission. Clearly, the DTI tries to play an even hand across the whole of the UK. The first two graphs that I showed you did not contain information about the English or Welsh regions, but the levels in many of those regions are below those of equivalent areas in Scotland. For example, the Welsh areas that now receive objective 1 funding, which cover just below 70 per cent of the Welsh population, would fall below the 75 per cent line in the graph showing percentage of EU average GDP per head.
The nub of the inquiry is that, as was reported on 31 May, some people have said that
It is useful.
I do not think that people on the ground would see it in that way. Those who are involved in bids—I have been involved to a certain extent in the Highland bid—try to put forward the best case for receiving objective 1 status or whatever project funding they might be interested in. They play by a set of rules that is laid down by the UK Government. I am not suggesting that Scotland has been differentially disadvantaged by those rules.
Was your question on the same subject, Dennis?
It was on a different subject.
Bear with me for a minute and I will come back to you.
I am interested in the relationship between agricultural spending and the structural funds, as a percentage of the assigned budget. Is there any correlation between the two?
The common agricultural policy funds are part of the annually managed expenditure and are not determined by the United Kingdom Government. They are simply passed through a bank account with the Bank of England; they are considerably larger than the structural funds that we are talking about today.
They form no part of the assigned budget?
No, they do not.
You said a number of times in your statement that Scotland's percentage share of the UK structural funds has been decreasing, but I would like to put that in context. Since 1992-93, the share has increased in every year except one. Those figures are shown in a table published in Jack McConnell's response to a question lodged by Andrew Wilson. Apart from in 1994-95, when it dropped to 7.2 per cent, there has been a steady increase since 1992.
Just to show that I am being impartial, I should point out that the answer was to a question from John Swinney.
They are from the same party.
You are right in saying that, since 1992, or thereabouts, Scotland's share has been increasing. It is complicated; perhaps I should have shown only three or four points. There are programming periods, and we are talking about the period toward 1998-99, when Scotland's share increased quite a lot—that might be because we were late in getting our projects in. Perhaps I should have averaged the period from 1993 to 1999.
As you say, the peaks on that graph could easily be explained by the back-ending of projects, as happens in objective 2, the late submissions or the initial payments.
The dispute started when the Barnett formula was changed. This is the first time that I have gone into it and I do not have a clue whether so many hundreds of millions have been filched; I approach the subject with an open mind. Given that the Barnett formula changed and the comprehensive spending review, which was introduced in 1997, took a closer look at the various regional needs in England, there should be some computation to say whether, in relative terms, Scotland has moved up or down the scale.
The trouble is that, in this discussion, the European structural funds are very small beer.
You mentioned 1 per cent, which is marginal. However, for someone in south-west Scotland, that marginal difference is quite significant. Can we also consider the sums involved to see whether they have changed noticeably as a proportion of the overall budget?
Scotland's share of UK public spending, which is what the Barnett formula determines, has been relatively stable over the 1990s. As you say, the Barnett formula has changed in various technical ways, which has probably led to what is popularly known as the Barnett squeeze. However, over the 1990s, the assigned budget has not fallen as quickly as the line on the graph that we are considering. That is partly because increases in public expenditure in the UK as a whole have taken place in areas to which the Barnett formula applies, namely health and education. Those are the areas that the present Government has emphasised. However, defence expenditure, which does not come from the Barnett formula, has collapsed as a share of UK public expenditure. That is one explanation.
If we were to compute a similar trend of Scotland's share of overall public expenditure and compare that with Scotland's share of UK structural funds, the difference would be the additional amount—the level of benefit—available to the Scottish Executive for lines of public expenditure that are not determined by structural funds. Could we do that, to allow us to make that comparison?
We could do that, but one might want to consider other items of expenditure. If we accept the trend line on the graph as at least a rough indication of what has happened, we see that Scotland's share of UK structural funds has almost halved in the period, whereas under no circumstances could anyone argue that Scotland's share of overall UK funding had halved over that period.
Professor, you said that it is almost impossible to come up with a simple way in which to determine additionality at a Scottish level. Is that difficulty due in part to the lack of transparency in UK Government expenditure statements?
That is a difficulty. I understand that, in response to the recent report on EU structural funding, the Welsh Executive has agreed to produce a more transparent statement about the way in which structural funds operate in Wales. I do not envy the task of the Executive in trying to come up with clear statements of what is happening, but some of the fears that have been expressed might be allayed by greater transparency.
If there was an obligation to be more transparent, would that be the responsibility of the Scottish Executive, the British Government or both?
The Treasury has increased its transparency in relation to the Barnett formula. It is now easier to understand where the assigned budget is coming from. Last March, the Treasury made a statement that made it clearer how the assigned budget is constructed. However, further work is required in that area. The Scottish Executive makes annual statements on where structural funds are going. Those statements do not say much about match funding, although it would be interesting to know where such funding comes from. Various sources are used—local government, enterprise companies, colleges and so on—and it would be interesting to know who is responsible for the bulk of match funding.
Are there similar difficulties in other member states of the European Union with devolved or federal structures? For example, would the Spanish Government be able to demonstrate additionality in Catalonia and is the German Government in a position to demonstrate additionality in one of the Länder?
I cannot give a definitive answer to that question. I am fairly confident that none of the other member states operates anything like the Barnett formula. Allocations that are made to maintain levels of public service in different Länder or different parts of Spain are more clear cut.
You said that, under the Barnett formula, if the Chancellor of the Exchequer was giving a certain amount of additional money to health, for example, Scotland would get 10.3 per cent of that. However, is it not the case that the Scottish Executive could, if it wanted, divert that money to some other part of the Scottish budget—to education or housing, for example?
It is completely free to do so. The Treasury produced a long list of programmes that were comparable and to which the Barnett formula applied. Health falls into that category, obviously. Strangely, the Docklands light railway also does, which means that we get 10 per cent of the money that was allocated to that. You are correct to say that it is the Parliament's prerogative to allocate the money in whatever way it chooses.
You said that Barnett was not based on need. Is not that the criticism that people in London and elsewhere make when they complain that Scotland gets a disproportionate share of resources?
Yes, broadly speaking. They point to the fact that education spending and health spending per head is higher in Scotland than in the UK as a whole. The Barnett formula has been a useful device for the Treasury because, as it is an automatically applied formula, there is no bickering among local authorities about what indicators, such as the rate of heart attacks or whatever, should be used to demonstrate need. I have seen such bickering between English councils and it is not pretty.
That sort of debate happens in Scotland as well. Indeed, local authorities are currently engaged in such a debate.
On the EU component of the assigned budget, the minister told us that structural fund payment surpluses were carried forward or reallocated to domestic programmes whereas deficits were covered by year-end flexibility. Do you think that that flexibility is a good thing?
At the beginning of the year, the Executive estimates—based on the single programming document that sets out what is to be done—how much money will be needed for structural funding throughout the year. If the amount that is set aside is too much or too little, the fund can be rolled over. To allow that to happen, the Executive must apply separately to the Treasury. The mechanism means that the Executive does not have to raid other Scottish budgets and the structural fund money can be kept isolated.
Does that mean that, if there is underspend, the money is not lost but goes into domestic programmes? It seems like a win-win situation for Scotland.
An attempt is being made to ensure that provision can be made over the whole period for the funding that is implied by the Executive's agreement to the single programming document. To ensure that that happens, one year's surplus may well have to be used. The money left over from a year in which not many projects came forward might be needed if a lot of projects piled in at the end, as happened in 1993-94. The idea is to predict the provision over the programming period as exactly as possible.
When we asked the minister about flexibility and the ability to reallocate, he told us that the Executive would want to use the surplus for economic development projects across Scotland to maintain the momentum and to ensure a lasting legacy. Do you think that there is sufficient flexibility to do that?
I do not think that, over a programming period, that is the way that one would want to run the—
That one would want to, or that one would be able to?
In a sense, that is a matter of semantics. It might be possible to use a surplus from European funding for another purpose, but what would be the point? Given the huge budget that we are talking about, what is essential is that those who spend the money—in the health department, the education department and so on—know what they are able to spend. Similarly, the amount of money that is likely to be spent on structural funds has to be accurately predicted.
We will have to clarify that matter.
You said that it was not pretty to watch English local authorities—and I assume that you were thinking about development agencies as well—arguing on the basis of need. However, that is what happens at a European level—the European Commission does that, too.
Exactly. Britain has been arguing vehemently—and rather transparently, given that our unemployment level is slightly lower than that in the rest of the Community—that unemployment is not a good indicator for structural fund programmes. No matter what level we are talking about, if there is a cake to be split up, people will try to ensure that they get the largest slice. However, the Barnett formula prevents that from happening.
We will move on to deal with ring fencing.
Is there a case to be made for ring-fencing the funds? Would that give us a better deal?
Would it ensure that we got more money out of Europe? No—the fights that we have just been discussing will continue to happen. Would it ensure that we got more money out of the Treasury? Perhaps. At the time of a comprehensive spending review, we could argue for the goalposts to be shifted. I suspect that that is what the Welsh are going to do.
We do not have ring fencing at the moment, although we are discussing its benefits. In a sense, the money is policed by the DTI. The Executive—or in the past the Scottish Office—presented its map. The map was approved by the DTI and the DTI submitted it through Cabinet committee to the European Commission. In a way, that element of the European funds is predesignated, or ring-fenced, with regard to the approval and the mapping of the money.
Yes, the share that you are going to get is probably fixed by the process that goes on in the DTI. Exactly what you have said does happen: Scotland makes its case, Wales makes its case and Merseyside makes its case. Those are brought together and presented to Europe, then Europe decides on the budget. Having agreed the single programming document with the DTI, the process pretty much follows on mechanically from there.
So in a way there is a ring-fencing process at the moment, because Scotland submits its expected share on its expected map, and, give or take some changes, the submission goes through the management executives at the lower level of European funding to ensure that the money is funnelled down. Apart from the payments from the social fund—because it is harder to find out where objective 3 funding goes—structural funding is ring-fenced already.
Yes, that is true. It is certainly not the case that the UK, or any part of the UK, reneges on agreements made in the single programming document. Once that is set, it is set in stone: Europe pays money to the Treasury, and the funds have to be found. Once the Treasury has transferred money to Scotland, the funds have to be found to meet the commitments for whatever programme it happens to be.
Over the longer term, will that amount of structural funds coming to Scotland increase or decrease? What is your view in terms of political considerations?
I suspect that they will decrease. My major reason for believing that is enlargement.
I agree with you 100 per cent. Is this case much worse than just upsetting the apple cart? In fact, Scotland could seriously lose out if ring fencing takes place.
It is possible that Scotland could lose out, but again, we are talking about scale. The fact is that, as a proportion of the overall assigned budget, we are talking about a small amount, although it affects people in Dumfries, Inverness and elsewhere. Nevertheless, as part of the great scheme of things in Scotland, it is not a huge amount.
But if it were going to have any impact, would your judgment be that it would be detrimental as opposed to beneficial?
That is a political judgment that I am not well qualified to make. It would depend on how skilled our negotiations were with the Treasury.
I will take Bruce Crawford, and a brief point from Margo MacDonald, because I want to draw this discussion to a conclusion.
I was glad to hear the interesting discussion on the Barnett formula. You are not aware of any other countries that have a Barnett formula, and therefore there probably are no other countries treating EU structural funds in the same way as we are. The convener referred to people who are saying that £730 million over the past number of years, and £971 million over the next six years, will not be within the Scottish assigned budget, and will therefore be removed because of EU structural funds from overall expenditure levels.
It depends on the context. There is no doubt that it would increase transparency. The question is how the Treasury would react, because you have a system that has been used for a long time and which is automatic, as you said. You would have a relatively small amount of money that you wanted to be treated differently. The pressure in the past has been to bring everything inside the assigned budget. The history is that in the early 90s the ERDF, which was previously negotiated directly with the SDA and the Scottish Office, was brought within the assigned budget. In a sense, you are saying, "Let's go back to where we were." Ultimately, it is a political issue. Clearly, there are ways of doing this, but the point is—
Can I put it another way?
Hold on, Bruce. We are starting to run out of time and I am going to draw this to a conclusion shortly.
It is a short question, which will require a short answer. If the political will existed to do that, would it be an advantage?
If it was purely for the sake of transparency, obviously you could see some advantages.
I put it to you that if the political will existed, it could be done relatively easily, because there is a formula that was previously in use to identify European funds. We are calling it ring fencing, but it is really just to monitor what happens. On the other hand, if you are the Treasury, you would like to have the flexibility, given the year-end rollover and all the rest of the funds, and the small amount of elbow room to move money around a wee bit.
You could argue that the Scottish Executive would like to have that flexibility too.
Of course, and the Treasury would like it.
Yes. The flexibility will, to some extent, come to the Scottish Executive, because if the right provision is not made in one year, there will be some flexibility, if the funds are not ring-fenced, to do other things with the money.
I will conclude by asking you a question, which you do not necessarily need to answer now; you can give the information to the clerk to the committee. What information should we seek from either the Scottish Executive or the Treasury that would finally answer whether additionality in the EU sense can be demonstrated in Scotland?
We thought a little bit about that, and we can easily give you an answer.
Thank you. You have been very helpful. This is probably the last information gathering session that we will have. Some time soon we need to start drawing some conclusions, although what inevitably happens is that every time you ask a question, it leads to another set of questions. People talk about neverendums. This can go on and on, but we will reach a conclusion soon.
Thank you.
I hope that Professor Bell can answer the question. We need further information from the Minister for Finance.
Can you give us a time scale?
I hope that we will meet on Tuesday 20 June, to start pulling some of this together. We may not do everything on that day, but we must start moving.
I am happy with that. However, there is one issue that we have not resolved, which is the UK evidence. I wonder whether we will be in a position next week to draw conclusions when we have not seen the whole picture.
Committee members were asked to indicate to the clerk any specific questions they had for the Treasury or the Scotland Office. I am not aware that any such questions have been indicated to the clerk. If, even at this late stage, members think of questions, they should put them in. However, we have been saying that for more than a fortnight and nothing has come forward.
Convener—
No, I am leaving it at that. We will discuss any issues that flow from that next week. If we need to go back into public session, we will do so.
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Convener's Report