Autumn Budget Statement and the Scottish Economy
The next item of business is a debate on motion S4M-01501, in the name of John Swinney, on the United Kingdom Government’s autumn budget statement and the Scottish economy.
15:17
I am grateful for the opportunity to open the debate on the autumn budget statement and the wider Scottish economy. It is now more than three years since the financial crisis began, sparking the deepest recession since the great depression. From the first signs of slowdown, the Scottish Government has put all its efforts into safeguarding the Scottish economy and promoting economic recovery. We will continue to take all the action that we can to achieve that goal, but we acknowledge the strong economic headwinds from the sovereign debt crisis in the euro zone, which is a key trading partner, and the inevitable implications that that will have for the economic conditions in which we operate and work to try to deliver economic recovery.
In addition to the data that is emerging from the euro zone, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development is forecasting very weak growth across all advanced economies, which will have wider implications for the trading relationships that we undertake as a country. The Chancellor of the Exchequer’s autumn statement and the revised economic forecast from the Office for Budget Responsibility confirmed the fragile state of the United Kingdom and the global economy, and the extent to which the outlook has deteriorated since the chancellor first set out his deficit reduction and growth plans just 18 months ago.
The OBR has sharply revised down its forecast for UK economic growth and now expects UK unemployment to continue rising well into next year. Because of the failure to secure growth, the OBR now forecasts that the UK Government will borrow £158 billion more over the next five years than was planned last June, and that further public expenditure cuts will be required in both 2015-16 and 2016-17 to meet the chancellor’s fiscal mandate.
One of this Administration’s fundamental points is that if we undertake borrowing, we must establish the correct balance between borrowing to sustain the public finances, and borrowing to encourage growth within our economy. The prospects for public expenditure that the chancellor has set out for 2015 and 2016 mean that Scotland will have faced public expenditure cuts for seven consecutive years, an outcome that the Institute for Fiscal Studies describes as historically unprecedented.
There are a number of reasons for the deterioration in the economic outlook. Continued uncertainty in the euro zone, the persistent impact of the financial crisis and rising commodity prices have all played their part; however, not all the blame can be laid at the door of the euro zone. Indeed, the OECD expects that France, Germany and the Netherlands will all grow faster than the UK this year despite their greater exposure to events in Europe. Some of the responsibility for the lack of economic growth must, therefore, be laid at the door of 11 Downing Street. I recognise that there is a need to deliver sustainable public finances and to set out a credible consolidation plan; however, the balance of the chancellor’s plans places too much emphasis on austerity and not enough emphasis on the promotion of economic growth in our society.
In comparing the United Kingdom with France and Germany, does the cabinet secretary accept that the coalition Government inherited the highest level of debt in the G7?
I know that Mary Scanlon assiduously follows my speeches in the Parliament. She will not have noticed me in any way shirking from apportioning responsibility to the difficult inheritance that the Conservative-Liberal Government faced in the summer of 2010. My point is about the balance between fiscal consolidation and the promotion of economic growth. When I advanced the proposition, before the autumn statement, of additional borrowing of £20 billion for capital investment, which would have had a consequential effect in Scotland of about £2 billion, a certain element of parliamentary and commentary opinion said that that would be a terrible amount of extra money to borrow. Now, we find that the chancellor is borrowing £158 billion more than he forecast in June 2010. That makes the proposition that I advanced seem even more modest.
The fundamental point is the need to balance repairing the public finances with providing incentives and encouragement to promote economic growth. The lack of a coherent economic plan from the UK Government and the decision to cut public expenditure too quickly and too deeply have brought the economic recovery to a clear halt.
The Scottish Government has not been alone in setting out its concerns. For the past 14 months, we have joined the other devolved Administrations in speaking out against the pace and the scale of the spending cuts, calling on the chancellor to respond to the weakening economic outlook with a plan for growth including a targeted stimulus to capital investment. In my reply to Mary Scanlon, I described the scale of investment that we thought was appropriate. However, the UK Government’s policies are not supporting growth. The UK economy grew by just 0.5 per cent over the past year and the OBR’s forecasts suggest that it will shrink during the current quarter. As the rest of the United Kingdom is Scotland’s largest trading partner, its recovery is vital to the success of Scotland’s recovery.
The cabinet secretary has rightly referred to the revision downwards of growth forecasts. What impact will that have on the Scottish Government’s spending review? Will he revise his growth forecast figures? For example, what impact will it have on business rates revenue forecasts?
Mr Baker asks a fair question. I point him to the evidence that I shared with the Economy, Energy and Tourism Committee some weeks ago. In the year of greatest economic difficulty, 2008-09, there was still an increase in the overall take of business rates because of buoyancy within the business rates equation. As I have also said to the Parliament, I keep these factors under constant review. The commitment that we make in the spending review to the provision of non-domestic rates income will be part of the statement on local government in the Parliament tomorrow. When we offer that figure, the Government is guaranteeing that figure as part of the spending review settlement.
The Scottish Government will do all that it can, within the economic powers that we have, to support economic recovery, enhance economic security and create employment. As a result of our actions, Scotland’s recession was shorter and shallower than the recession in the rest of the UK, and we have a lower unemployment rate and a higher rate of employment than the rest of the UK.
Our enterprise agencies’ focused work is helping to attract new investment and major international companies to Scotland. Avaloq, Dell, Amazon, FMC Technologies and Doosan Power Systems are just a few of the companies that have announced new investments in Scotland.
We continue to embark on ambitious proposals to connect with major developing markets. China continues to be a driver of global growth and we are working hard to build on our links with it and create opportunities for Scottish companies. Last year, Scotch whisky was given legal protection with a geographical indication, which resulted in a 30 per cent rise in whisky exports to China in the first half of this year in comparison with 2010.
In January, we reached agreement with the Chinese Government to permit Scottish salmon exports into China for the first time. In the first half of this year, Scottish companies exported 2,300 tonnes of farmed salmon to China. We are working to ensure that more Scottish companies can take advantage of trade and investment opportunities in China and we are trying to attract more Chinese companies to base their European operations here.
This week, the First Minister has built on those achievements by signing a memorandum of understanding on culture, which commits the Scottish and Chinese Governments to supporting greater exchange and collaboration in the arts, creative industries, heritage and national collections, which will have a significant economic impact into the bargain.
In 2007, the Government chose to focus on key sectors in the Scottish economy. Many of those sectors have recovered and are growing strongly. In June, we announced a £1.1 million funding boost for Scotland’s food and drink industry. In September, manufacturing in our food and drink sector broke £9 billion in turnover for the first time. We are leading developments in renewable energy. More than £750 million of new renewable electricity projects have begun generating in Scotland, and the pipeline of projects will be worth £46 billion in the years that lie ahead.
At the heart of the Government’s growth strategy is infrastructure investment. In response to a cut of about a third in our capital budget in plans that the previous UK Government put in place, we propose to take forward a new £2.5 billion programme of non-profit-distributing investment and to switch significant sums from revenue to capital budgets and a range of innovative financial mechanisms to maximise investment. In addition to providing an immediate economic boost, that investment will deliver new schools, hospitals, houses and roads across Scotland.
I apologise for missing the start of the cabinet secretary’s speech.
In the switch from revenue to capital quite a large sum—about £150 million—will go into the Scottish futures fund. However, if I heard the cabinet secretary right in previous speeches, that money came from savings on the Forth crossing. Surely that is a switch from capital to capital and not from revenue to capital.
No. The budget proposals rely on a shift from the revenue columns to the capital columns—that is a straightforward transaction in the budget document.
The Forth crossing is not in the revenue budget.
I point out to Mr Brown that the UK Government has of course reduced our capital budget by 36 per cent, which has been moderated to 32 per cent. In the overall funding envelope that is available to us, we are acting to mitigate the significant reduction in the capital budget that was 36 per cent and has been tempered to 32 per cent by the autumn statement. We made the transfers from resource to capital to support the capital programme.
Yesterday, we published our “Infrastructure Investment Plan 2011”, which outlines more than 50 key infrastructure projects in a range of sectors across Scotland. The commitments in that programme will see the A9 dualled by 2025 and the A96 dualled within a further five years. That will complete the dualling of the routes between all Scotland’s six cities and will deliver significant economic benefits. The whole plan demonstrates a vision of how we take forward Scotland’s infrastructure.
As we said in a debate last Thursday, we are taking active steps to encourage people back into employment. We have the programme to fund a record 25,000 modern apprenticeship places and the opportunities for all programme, which guarantees a training or learning place for all 16 to 19-year-olds. Mr Russell will deal with more of those questions, including details on the additional £15 million that we have made available today for the college transformation fund, which will assist colleges in giving effect to the reforms that we have proposed to provide better outcomes for employers, learners and taxpayers into the bargain.
The Government can welcome some elements of the programme that was announced in the autumn statement. We welcome the increased resources of £433 million in capital consequentials over the duration of the spending review. The delivery of those additional resources comes later than I would like, because capital investment is required now but two thirds of the additional capital will not be available until years 2 and 3 of the spending review. Although those consequentials are welcome, they would have greater economic impact if they were delivered in the short term rather than the medium term.
The infrastructure plan is a 20-year plan. The increased funding is provided within the first three years. What has been accelerated as a result of the increased funding?
Mr Rennie expects me to take a look at those questions, and we will come back to the Parliament, as we will on the other consequentials, to set out how our plans will change to bring forward capital projects. However, I point out to Mr Rennie that there is only £68 million of additional capital resources in 2012-13, and the remaining two-thirds will be made available during the final two years of the spending review.
Will the minister give way?
I would give way to Mr Findlay if—
Cabinet secretary, you are in your last minute.
I apologise to Mr Findlay. I will happily deal with his points during the debate.
The autumn statement provided some additional capital consequentials for the Scottish Government and we will allocate them in due course. I am, however, struck by the Office for Budget Responsibility’s assessment, which is:
“the Government has announced a number of measures that have a broadly neutral fiscal impact overall and, in aggregate, they have limited impact on our economy forecast.”
In the context of a significant deterioration in the chancellor’s economic forecasts, the OBR’s assessment demonstrates that more needs to be done to stimulate the UK economy. The Scottish Government will do everything in its power and use every lever that is at its disposal to support households and businesses. We will do what we can to support output and jobs, and we encourage the UK Government to support us in our efforts to deliver economic recovery in Scotland.
I move,
That the Parliament notes the Chancellor’s Autumn Statement and that the Office for Budget Responsibility has demonstrated that the UK Government’s economic and fiscal plan has failed, with a cut of over two thirds in the growth forecast for 2012; agrees that the UK Government’s response falls far short of the urgent action that Scotland needs to boost growth; notes that the Chancellor has proposed only a limited increase in capital budgets and that two thirds of the new capital investment will not be available until 2013, despite the urgent need for a stimulus this year and next; supports the Scottish Government’s call to the UK Government for a targeted, expanded programme of some £2 billion for capital infrastructure investment in Scotland to help offset the 32% real-terms cut to Scotland’s capital budget inflicted by the UK Government; notes that the Scottish Government will support around £9 billion of capital spending over the next three years to deliver new schools, hospitals, houses, roads, water infrastructure, community facilities and improved availability of high speed broadband across Scotland; welcomes the Scottish Government’s infrastructure investment plan, which will provide crucial support for employment, with every additional £100 million of capital invested per year estimated to generate £160 million worth of economic activity and support 1,400 jobs in the wider economy for that year; notes that, as a result of the Scottish Government’s £2.5 billion non-profit distributing capital programme and switching of resources from revenue to capital, infrastructure investment in Scotland will now rise year on year throughout the spending review period; supports the Scottish Government’s actions to boost economic growth through initiatives such as maintaining Scotland as the most competitive environment for business in the UK; supports the Scottish Government’s efforts to boost economic security and household budgets by freezing the council tax, abolishing prescription charges and protecting concessionary travel, and welcomes the success of Scotland’s enterprise agencies in securing major new investments in recent months from international companies.
15:32
This is a welcome opportunity to debate the autumn statement and its implications for Scotland. It comes at a critical point for our economy and for the world economy, when so many of the indicators are bleak.
The Ernst & Young Scottish ITEM—independent Treasury economic model—club report that was published this week shows the extent of the problem here in Scotland. It found that our economy is recovering at a slower rate than in the UK as a whole. Growth north of the border totalled 1.4 per cent in the past two years, compared with 2.8 per cent across the UK. The report says:
“Scotland is not expected to return to peak employment until the early 2020s.”
The report also downgraded its forecast for Scottish growth in 2012 from 1.9 to 1.1 per cent following a year in which the Scottish economy has grown by only 0.6 per cent. The last gross domestic product figures showed growth in Scotland actually slowing from 0.2 to 0.1 per cent. We must be determined to take the necessary action to return Scotland to stronger growth, but we must also recognise the gravity of our economic situation and the scale of the challenge.
That is why we need government at all levels to take the correct decisions to create the right conditions for economic growth. Unfortunately, it is clear that the right decisions have not been taken.
We will find much common ground with the cabinet secretary’s assessment of the UK Government’s strategy and the autumn statement. However, as there has been a recent tendency for some to quote out of context the instances in which I agree with the cabinet secretary, I emphasise that we do not believe that the Scottish Government’s response to the economic situation has been sufficient.
Given the Scottish Government’s crucial role in promoting economic growth, it is simply not credible to blame all our ills on the UK Government. The coalition strategy certainly is not helping and it is the wrong one for the UK economy. The autumn statement is in effect an admission of defeat for Mr Osborne’s austerity strategy. It is now clear that David Cameron’s and George Osborne’s reckless, ideology-driven economic plan has backfired.
Is it not a consequence of the coalition Government’s strategy that we have the lowest interest rates in the world? Would not a consequence of the Labour Party’s strategy be to put those low interest rates at risk? What would be the consequences of that for the economy in repaying the record level of debt that Labour left us and the consequences for the many millions of families who would see their mortgages soar?
I presume that Mr Carlaw would not have acted to bail out the banks.
The UK Government has left us the lowest rates of growth in the world, and it has choked off the recovery that Labour set in motion. As the cabinet secretary said, the UK Government is set to borrow £158 billion more than it planned to a year ago. That is the bill for economic failure, higher unemployment and the increased spend on benefits that are the result of its failed plan. Its pledge to balance the books by 2015 has gone. Instead, the coalition has announced plans for further cuts into 2016-17, as the cabinet secretary said.
Will the member acknowledge what the Institute for Fiscal Studies has stated? It said that if Labour’s plans had been implemented, they would
“now of course have implied even higher debt levels over this parliament than those we will in fact see.”
No, because the figures that I have show that the UK Government plans £37 billion more borrowing in future years than the amount in Labour’s plans that were announced at the election. It is clear that, under the Conservatives’ plans, we are in an even worse situation, even in terms of borrowing, that there has been pain but no gain, and that families are paying the price. The autumn statement shows the clear need for a different economic strategy for the UK and Scotland.
There are elements of the autumn statement that at least reflect some of the concerns that we have raised, although we think that they do not go far enough. There is a youth jobs programme, although it will be smaller than the future jobs fund initiative, which should never have been scrapped. Young people will not be helped until April next year, but consequentials will be brought to the Scottish Government, which we have urged ministers to invest in expanding the future jobs fund. We welcome the fact that that fund has been retained here in the voluntary sector with a great deal of success, and we wish to see it extended into the private sector.
The credit easing and national loan guarantee is an admission that the project Merlin deal has not worked. It gave the banks a tax cut this year in return for vague and unfulfilled promises to increase lending to small businesses. We can only hope that the new scheme will prove more successful.
The new UK Government proposals on infrastructure projects, to which the cabinet secretary referred, make it clear that it was a mistake to reduce capital spending in the first place. We can only hope that those proposals will actually deliver new projects, but again we want to see the detail.
Will the member give way?
I have already given way to Mr Brown. I will try to take an intervention from him later.
We understand that there will be limited consequentials in the new plans for housing from the UK Government. We hope that they will be invested in social housing in Scotland.
Labour has offered alternative proposals for a different strategy—for a plan B. We have come forward with a five-point plan for our economy that includes a tax on bank bonuses to fund a national jobs plan for young people, a temporary reversal of the damaging increase in VAT, a one-year cut in VAT on home improvements to 5 per cent, and a one-year national insurance tax break for every small firm that takes on extra workers. Those points are for the UK Government, but the fifth is very much a Scottish Government responsibility too, as the aim is to bring forward investment in infrastructure projects to get people back to work.
We have, of course, also offered alternatives to the Scottish Government policy, as we outlined in the debate on youth unemployment last week. We have called for a number of measures, including the appointment of a dedicated minister for youth employment. We are pleased that the Scottish Government has made that appointment, and we welcome Angela Constance to her new role. Beyond expanding the future jobs fund, we have also called for new legislation on procurement to support local businesses, and a capital investment plan that works.
When we heard the cabinet secretary say in the summer that he wanted to pursue a different route from the UK Government and prioritise investment in infrastructure—he outlined that again in today’s debate—we very much welcomed that. Indeed, that is the kind of strategy that Labour has been promoting on a UK-wide basis. However, although we have had agreement on the analysis, we have been disappointed in the delivery. The budget for affordable housing is being cut by 50 per cent, and major infrastructure projects have been delayed or there is no timetable for their completion.
We hoped that the release of the infrastructure plan yesterday would bring greater clarity on future projects, but I could not put things better than The Scotsman did this morning. It reported:
“Hours after infrastructure secretary Alex Neil set out his blueprint for new building projects in parliament yesterday, it became clear that many of the schemes had already been announced, while others are not due to be completed for decades.”
We need clarity now on delivery and on the detail of how the schemes will be funded. We will continue to press the Scottish Government on these issues, because we need action, not aspiration, on key infrastructure projects.
Will Mr Baker take this opportunity to confirm his understanding of the spending review, which involves a rising trend of capital expenditure in Scotland despite the fact that we face a 32 per cent reduction in the resources available to us for capital projects from the United Kingdom Government?
My understanding, from what the cabinet secretary said earlier, is that there will be consequentials later in the spending review cycle involving increased spending for infrastructure. However, we need a greater emphasis on infrastructure spending right now. Unfortunately, as I have just illustrated with yesterday’s reactions to the plan, not only from The Scotsman but more widely, there are still too many questions about delays, about a lack of timescale for specific projects and about cuts in areas such as affordable housing.
Another central concern is the proposed 20 per cent cut in college budgets, which will damage our economy and further damage opportunities for our young people at a time when youth unemployment in Scotland already stands at 100,000. If the only concession that we are to get from the Scottish Government is £15 million in change funds when college budgets are to be reduced by £74 million, that will be entirely inadequate. It will mean that colleges will have to proceed with cuts, which will reduce educational opportunities for many people in Scotland.
We therefore ask the Scottish Government not to make the mistakes that the UK Government has made. We ask it to implement an infrastructure plan that will actually deliver new projects, and to think again about cuts that would damage our economy. We ask it to think again on these vital issues because the autumn statement was a demonstration of the cost of getting it wrong, and Scotland cannot afford for ministers to get this wrong. The people of Scotland do not want an economic strategy that is driven by an ideological obsession with cuts in public investment or with constitutional upheaval. They want an economic strategy that is driven by the need to return to growth and to get people back into work. We believe that, even in these tough times, with the right decisions, we can put Scotland on the right road to a more prosperous future. That should be the priority for ministers, because it is a priority for the people of Scotland.
I move amendment S4M-01501.3, to leave out from first “supports” to end and insert:
“calls on the UK Government to confer borrowing powers on the Scottish Government from April 2012 to allow for an expanded capital infrastructure programme; notes the publication of the Scottish Government’s Infrastructure Investment Plan 2011; urges the Scottish Government to provide milestones for each infrastructure project to ensure that the list of delayed infrastructure projects does not grow longer; notes that Scotland’s economic growth over the last 12 months has been disappointing despite economic growth being the stated purpose of the Scottish Government; calls on the Scottish Government to ensure that the measures in the Scottish budget support economic recovery to improve Scotland’s growth rate; to this end, urges the Scottish Government to reconsider the significant cuts that it has made to the affordable housing and further education budgets; notes that disposable household income has fallen by 2.3% this year, a post-war record, and is forecast to fall again next year, which coincides with public sector workers in Scotland and the rest of the UK having to pay more in pension contributions; notes that the Chancellor has outlined a further two years of spending cuts and that the proposed six years of cuts in spending are unprecedented, and regrets that the actions of the UK Government will lead to an increase in child poverty.”
15:42
It is worth reflecting on some of the analysis and feedback from economists since last week’s autumn statement. The Economist put it simply, stating that
“the government’s policies are broadly right.”
The Financial Times stated on the day after the autumn statement:
“There is nothing in the OBR’s documents that support the view that deficit reduction is the cause of the government’s current deficit-reduction woes.”
The editorial in the Financial Times probably put it best when it said that
“abandoning the current spending plans would be a huge gamble and one whose consequences would be hard to deal with were it to go wrong. The austerity plan has convinced markets that it is safe to lend to the British government. ”
It is also worth reflecting on the reasons for the disappointing growth predictions, and the disappointing levels of borrowing that will be required, to which the cabinet secretary referred. We cannot look just at the figures from the Office for Budget Responsibility; we have to look at the analysis behind them as well.
The primary explanation given on page 5 of the OBR’s report was:
“The economy has grown less strongly this year than we forecast in March, primarily because higher-than-expected inflation has squeezed household incomes and consumer spending.”
That has involved energy costs in particular, including oil, as well as the cost of food and other commodities. That has been a major factor, but the figures are expected to fall slightly over the next year, and to fall sharply in the years thereafter, according to the Bank of England. That ought to reduce the drag on the economy over time.
A second reason given was that the structural deficit is higher than previously thought. In fact, it is a full 1.6 per cent of gross domestic product higher than we originally thought. That would have been the case regardless of who was in government and regardless of what action the Government took—the downturn was far worse than we originally realised. We may not have realised that if the Labour Party had remained in government, because we probably would not have had an Office for Budget Responsibility to tell us. Although it delivered a glut of bad news last week, at least there is an office with independent oversight that does not allow chancellors to rest on what have been pretty rosy assumptions previously.
Does Gavin Brown agree that it is strange that it takes the OBR 18 months to realise that the strategic deficit is worse than planned? What has it been doing for the past 18 months?
I find it surprising that the member wishes to criticise the OBR, which has received praise for its work from across the political and economic spectrum and across the United Kingdom. I suspect that it took 18 months because there is an enormous amount of detail to be gone through and the office started from zero, in effect, when the coalition Government came into office.
The consequence of the Government’s actions is that the yield on UK Government bonds is about as low as it can get. We have retained our triple-A status, even as dozens of others falter across the world, with a downgrade watch being placed on both France and Germany just this week. Only a handful of countries around the world can borrow more cheaply than we can over the next 10 years. That is serious, because a rise in yield of even just 1 per cent would add £7.5 billion to the debt interest payments by 2016. The UK Government has therefore to be applauded and given great credit for the measures that it has taken.
What is the cost to our economy from the fact that our growth rates are higher than only those of Greece and Portugal, out of the whole euro zone?
The growth rates are very disappointing, but if one looks at the OBR report in full—not just the press release that accompanied it—one sees that, although the prediction for growth in the UK in 2012 is a disappointing 0.7 per cent, the growth prediction for the euro zone for 2012 is 0.5 per cent. The euro zone therefore has a lower predicted growth rate for 2012 than the United Kingdom.
I have only a minute left, but my colleagues Mary Scanlon and Murdo Fraser will talk more about the positive measures that the UK Government has taken in the autumn statement. On credit easing, although the details are awaited, there will be £20 billion of guarantees for bank funding to be made available over two years. That will allow for lower-cost lending to smaller businesses—perhaps a full percentage point lower.
We have also had the cancellation of the August rise in fuel duty and the postponement to August of the January rise. The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland said that that
“will have a direct impact on employability and household spending.”
There will also be £433 million-worth of increases in capital spending over the course of the next three years.
The growth figures were disappointing, but we have to look at the reasons for them and the potential impact once inflation decreases over the next couple of years. There were positive measures in the autumn statement, and it is right that they are put on the record.
I move amendment S4M-01501.1, to leave out from “that the Office” to end and insert:
“and welcomes the numerous measures in it that will help people and businesses across Scotland, including the Chancellor’s commitments to fund an ambitious programme of infrastructure investment that will result in an additional £433 million for Scotland, to implement a package of credit easing measures to protect the flow of credit to smaller and medium-sized businesses, freeze fuel duty, make £50 million available to enable the replacement of the Caledonian Sleeper fleet, introduce the Youth Contract, which it is estimated will create opportunities for tens of thousands of young people in Scotland, including apprenticeships and work experience placements, increase the basic state pension, which will benefit one million older people in Scotland and invest in broadband through an urban broadband fund, which will create 10 super-connected cities in the UK including Edinburgh, and therefore calls on the Scottish Government to amend its draft budget to reconsider cuts in areas that help the economy, scrap the anti-competitive retail levy and demonstrate exactly where it is moving revenue spending to capital spending.”
15:48
I rise to speak in favour of the amendment in my name.
It is important that I start by saying where we agree with the Scottish Government. We support the innovation in the use of capital with the non-profit-distributing route for attracting private investment, which was actually pioneered by Liberal Democrats in Argyll. We strongly support the Government’s new plans on early intervention and energy, and we have advocated and advanced similar policies for many years.
On that basis, I was rather surprised that there was so little welcome in the finance secretary’s remarks for the measures in the autumn statement that Gavin Brown has just outlined. It is worth repeating those measures: the island fuel derogation, which is worth 5p a litre; the deferring of the 3p fuel duty increase and the cancellation of the inflation increase; the youth contract; the urban broadband fund for Edinburgh; and credit easing for small and medium-sized businesses.
Those measures are all in addition to the cuts in income tax that are worth £200 to low and middle-income earners; the increased bank levy; and, at £5.30, the highest cash increase in the state pension ever announced. I was puzzled that I did not hear more welcome for those measures; in my view, they are welcome.
Will the member give way?
Let me make a bit of progress.
I was even more puzzled by the remarks that the Cabinet Secretary for Infrastructure and Capital Investment made yesterday to The Press and Journal. He said that the £6 billion extra borrowing that the Scottish National Party wants in the Scotland Bill would be used to accelerate the plans for the A9 and the A96. So, the Cabinet Secretary for Infrastructure and Capital Investment has decided where to spend that extra money—the money that he does not have—but the Cabinet Secretary for Finance, Employment and Sustainable Growth cannot tell us where he would spend the money that he does have, which is the £433 million of extra capital that the UK Government provided to Scotland in the autumn statement.
I am grateful to Mr Rennie for giving way, but is his argument on this point not just a little bit thin, given that the United Kingdom Government cannot currently tell me what the revenue consequentials are of the chancellor’s autumn statement? It is now a week after that statement and it still cannot give me the detail. In all the time that I dealt with the UK Treasury under the Labour Party, at least it could tell me on the day of the budget what the consequentials were. Why cannot the UK Government get its act together and give me that information?
Obviously Mr Swinney has not spoken to his Cabinet Secretary for Infrastructure and Capital Investment, who has tremendous foresight. He can see 20, 30 or 40 years ahead and is going to spend that £6 billion—the money that he does not even have yet. A few fewer lessons from the SNP in that regard would be helpful.
The SNP demands more borrowing but wants to rely on the interest rates earned by a plan to reduce borrowing in the UK. An increase in Government bond interest rates, as seen in Greece and Italy, on a £60 billion investment programme means a substantial amount of extra interest—billions, in fact. That would mean that schemes the length and breadth of Scotland would have to be cut or delayed. However, the SNP simply assumes that the hard-won UK credit rating and record low interest rates will roll forward into an independent Scotland.
The fact that that extra spending can be debated in this Parliament today is a direct result of the UK Government’s early effort to put the public finances back on a stable footing. It was the tough but necessary decisions taken 18 months ago that stabilised the international credit rating, kept interest rates low and supported the economy. If we had followed the SNP’s so-called plan B, we might well have been in a very different position today, with a poor credit rating and higher interest rates, which would have put up mortgage payments and cost families more, and which would have cost jobs. I would not recommend that course. I hope that the SNP might reflect on its advice, too.
I do not think that the Scottish Government is using all the powers and levers that it currently has at its disposal. It has ignored the views of its own independent budget review group and the Scottish Futures Trust, which both said that there was a better way for Scottish Water—a public body—to be structured to deliver substantial gains to the Scottish economy.
Under our plans, we would use that money to deliver transformational change through early intervention; accelerate plans for broadband; generate new science-based jobs and businesses; and boost energy installation work to cut fuel bills. Those are positive plans that would have a lasting effect on the Scottish economy and champion social justice, but it seems that we have missed that opportunity.
I repeat my call in relation to college funding, despite the £15 million that the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning announced on Radio Scotland this morning. He thinks that £15 million off a £74 million cut to colleges is a wand that will wave all the problems away. The money is there. He has the £67 million. He could spend it—he could announce it this afternoon in his summing up. Will he take the opportunity to reverse the cuts to colleges and stop the cuts to college places? This is an opportunity for the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning to step up to the mark.
Mr Rennie, please conclude.
There are few households that remain unaffected by the current economic crisis. It is at times like this that I am reassured that Scotland is part of a bigger UK family so that we can share the risk, just as, in the good times, we can share the wins.
I move amendment S4M-01501.2, to leave out from “that the Office” to end and insert:
“; notes that the UK Government is investing £68 million in super-fast broadband in Scotland alongside £50 million from the Scottish Government, has won a fuel derogation for the islands from the European Commission, has deferred the 3p fuel duty increase scheduled for January in addition to the cuts in income tax worth £200 to low and middle earners, has increased the bank levy and provided the highest cash increase in the state pension ever announced; notes that the Scottish Government’s response is characterised by an absence of answers on its own plans, including for separation from the rest of the UK and publishing no opinion on the crisis in the Eurozone; is further concerned that the Scottish Government has published no analysis of the credit rating and interest rates likely in an independent Scotland, apart from an unsubstantiated assumption that the UK’s hard-won credit status and record low interest rates would continue in an independent Scotland, even though the evidence from across Europe is that governments that continue to increase borrowing without serious plans to tackle their deficit find that their borrowing rates rocket; understands that such a rise in Scottish borrowing rates on a £60 billion capital programme will result in billions of pounds of extra interest payments and lead to the delay and cancellation of capital projects the length and breadth of the country; finds it absurd that Scottish Government ministers have promised faster delivery of their published investment plans by incorporating additional borrowing made possible through the Scotland Bill while simultaneously threatening to veto the Scotland Bill; is concerned that the Scottish Government is still not using all of the current resources and powers at its disposal, not least on Scottish Water, which continues to have substantial resources locked in it when the Scottish Government’s independent budget review and the Scottish Futures Trust both offered alternative, public sector structures that could free substantial resources for investment in the economy; welcomes the UK Government’s £1 billion Youth Contract programme, which will see around £100 million of benefit to Scotland, a small part allocated to the Scottish Government but the vast majority provided direct to Scottish businesses to improve the prospects of a generation of young people through employment support; regrets that those prospects for young people are harmed by the Scottish Government’s continued plans to cut the budget for colleges despite the unexpected receipt of additional consequentials from the UK Government; notes that success in attracting investment by global companies in Scotland is best achieved by joint working with the UK Government, as evidenced by the recent result at Michelin in Dundee, and calls on the Scottish Government to set out the positive impact on its plans of the addition of £430 million capital consequentials, set out the projects funded by projected Scottish Government borrowing that would be lost if the Scotland Bill was vetoed and allocate its revenue consequentials, including a sum to prevent cuts to college budgets.”
We come to the open debate. Members have a very tight six minutes.
15:55
With the economy still at the forefront of so many people’s minds, I can think of no more important a subject for us to be debating. However, it was a bit rich of Mr Rennie to suggest that we should be chuffed that there is not to be a 3p a litre increase in fuel duty. Scotland has most of the EU’s oil, yet we pay more for it at the pumps than virtually anyone else. As for pensioners getting their biggest rise ever, it is a feature of inflation that pensions are going up; in real terms, they are not going up at all.
What?
Pensions are not going up in real terms, when inflation is taken out of the equation.
We continue to face great economic challenges. Unfortunately, many Scottish households have already endured financial difficulties for far too long. It was, of course, the previous Labour UK Government that led us into the current economic crisis through its failure to regulate adequately the world’s largest financial centre, the City of London, and which allowed inequality throughout the UK to skyrocket. I note that Labour leadership candidate Johann Lamont said:
“Government has to intervene to make that bridge between a strong economy and shared prosperity.”
Richard Baker rose—
However, a report that the OECD released earlier this week showed that inequality rose at a higher rate in the UK than in any other OECD country during the decade leading up to the 2008 economic recession. That happened under Labour. I will let Mr Baker in when I have made some progress.
Unfortunately, recent figures from the OBR illustrate that the policies that the Conservative-Lib Dem UK Government has pursued have failed to improve the current economic climate. As we have already heard, the forecasts have been downgraded. The OBR’s revised figures fully demonstrate that the coalition Government’s austerity-at-any-cost approach has failed and that a change of course is sorely needed. The OECD has predicted that the UK will fall back into recession in 2012.
Neil Findlay rose—
In last week’s autumn statement, the chancellor had a golden opportunity to acknowledge the UK Government’s failures so far and to outline a plan B but, instead, George Osborne has stubbornly clung to plan A.
Gavin Brown rose—
The previous Labour UK Government put us in a hole, and now the current Conservative-Lib Dem Government in London is digging it even deeper.
Prior to the chancellor’s statement last week, the SNP Government called for an expanded programme of £2 billion for capital infrastructure investment in Scotland to help offset the cuts that have been imposed on us. Such a programme would boost the economy and create jobs, and would support the construction of schools, hospitals and roads, among other projects.
When Labour was in power, it gave the Northern Ireland Assembly, which represents a population that is a third of the size of Scotland’s, £2.5 billion in borrowing consent but gave Scotland nothing. Perhaps a Labour member would like to intervene to tell us why Scotland was discriminated against in that way. I will be happy to give way to Neil Findlay or, indeed, Richard Baker.
The member mentioned people’s income. Given that last week he was put up on “Newsnight Scotland” as the strike breaker in chief, will he give the Cabinet Secretary for Finance, Employment and Sustainable Growth some advice on public sector pay?
The reality is that, under the Scottish Government, households will be more than £1,000 better off because of the council tax freeze alone. I notice that Mr Findlay was too embarrassed to defend the previous UK Government’s discrimination against Scotland on borrowing consent. Perhaps that is something that he might want to think about for the next debate.
Although the UK Government has offered some additional funding, it is not nearly as much as required and most of it will not be available until after 2013. In short, it is far too little, far too late. Despite last week’s disappointing news, I have every confidence that the SNP Government will continue to do all in its power to assist struggling households throughout Scotland during these difficult times.
I welcome the measures that the finance secretary has taken to increase capital spending, despite the cuts of 32 per cent that Westminster has imposed. I also welcome the SNP Government responding to Lord Smith’s report on youth unemployment by appointing a designated youth employment minister. That demonstrates how seriously the SNP Government takes the issue, which continues to be a problem in many parts of Scotland, including North Ayrshire.
The SNP Government is using every lever at its disposal to boost the Scottish economy and increase economic recovery, as the cabinet secretary has made clear, but the UK Government must play its part, instead of stubbornly sticking to an economic strategy that has proved a failure. I ask Conservative and Lib Dem members to tell their Westminster colleagues to make Scottish economic recovery a higher priority and to repeat our calls for a reduction in VAT on building repairs and maintenance work from 20 to 5 per cent to boost the construction industry and create jobs.
If the UK Government is unwilling to take the necessary steps to promote economic recovery in Scotland, it should give this Parliament the powers that it needs to take those vital steps. As the Scottish social attitudes survey illustrates, the Scottish people have moved light years ahead of the Scotland Bill and our ossified unionist opponents by supporting the Scottish Parliament having the power to take such decisions for Scotland.
As for Labour members, I realise that their party will soon have a new leader, and I hope that that will bring about a drastic change in the Labour Party's approach to Scotland. However, from what I have seen so far, all we seem to be getting is opposition for opposition’s sake. This week, both Johann Lamont and Ken Macintosh spoke against SNP Government plans to keep council tax frozen for the duration of this session of Parliament, despite the fact that the Minister for Local Government and Planning, Aileen Campbell, told the Scottish Parliament:
“the average saving for a council tax band D dwelling over the current session ... will be more than £1,136.”—[Official Report, 24 November 2011; c 3832.]
This Government is putting money in people’s pockets when it is most needed, while Labour want to deny Scottish families that money.
The economic challenges that we face might be severe but they are not insurmountable. In last week’s autumn statement, the chancellor missed an opportunity to indicate a much needed change of direction. However, this Parliament must press the UK Government either to take the necessary action to restore prosperity or to give this SNP Government the powers that it needs to promote economic recovery and create jobs in Scotland.
Of course, access to Scotland’s revenues—the £13.4 billion in oil revenues that is heading south this year, along with the £3 billion in whisky revenues, which, as we heard last week, are up 23 per cent—would go a long way towards ensuring long-term economic prosperity. Look at Norway.
16:01
In last week’s statement, the UK Government continued to damage the economy, to penalise those on lower incomes in particular and to blame everyone else except itself. Our objective should be to do the opposite in all three respects.
The most shocking summary of the statement is to be found in the distributional impact graphs of the Institute of Fiscal Studies, which showed that the biggest losers are families with children. Even more horrific, the population’s lowest two income deciles lost the most—and the third, fourth and fifth poorest deciles thereafter—while those in the upper deciles were penalised the least. The UK Government itself has admitted that last week’s statement, with the changes to tax credits and certain other policies, will result in child poverty in the UK rising by 100,000 next year. That is a shocking admission—and perhaps even more shocking is the UK Government’s blatant disregard of the internationally recognised definition of child poverty, which it says it will henceforth ignore. That is not just blatant social injustice; it is taking income away from low-income families and further shrinking demand in the economy. Of course, the collapse in demand is perhaps the key problem facing the UK economy just now.
It is not just the left that is objecting to such moves. This week, the OECD criticised the UK Government, saying that it must do something about income inequality; in fact, it advocated further taxes on the rich. Alas, last week, the UK Government did exactly the opposite.
With regard to the wider economy, the UK Government began its term by saying that it could not borrow its way out of a crisis. However, as we know, borrowing is now higher than ever. That is not surprising—after all, it is the economy that defines the size of the deficit, not the deficit that determines the size of the economy.
Last week’s statement was not a statement for growth. The cabinet secretary has already referred to the report from the OBR, which made no adjustment as a result of the measures set out in the statement. Gavin Brown might have found some economist to back his point of view but the reality is that there are just as many—indeed, there are more—distinguished commentators who disagree with him. I have not got time to read out the full quotation but in October even the International Monetary Fund, which is often quoted by the Conservatives, said that the UK Government should consider delaying some of its planned consolidation.
Of course, it is not just the IMF that is saying so; the same is being said by a clutch of Nobel prize-winning economists and very reputable commentators, including Martin Wolf of the Financial Times. I know that Gavin Brown wanted to quote the Financial Times but Martin Wolf certainly does not share the view that Mr Brown quoted. One such Nobel laureate is Paul Krugman who, this week, made a striking statement when he compared the chancellor to
“a medieval doctor bleeding his patient, observing that the patient is getting sicker, not better, and deciding that this calls for even more bleeding.”
We have heard the usual arguments from the Conservatives today: if we had not had “bleeding”—to use Paul Krugman’s word—interest rates would have gone through the roof. However, that is not the case. It is illiterate fantasy to believe that long-term low interest rates are the result of the policies of the United Kingdom Government. They are, in fact, a sign of stagnant growth. We saw that with long-term low interest rates in Japan in the 1990s.
Does Mr Chisholm understand that, in Italy today, interest rates are at 7.2 per cent. Is that a sign of high growth in the Italian economy?
The Italian situation is completely different from the UK situation. Italy is in the euro. At least Italy has higher growth than the UK; in the European Union, only Greece, Portugal and Cyprus have lower growth than the UK.
The main result of the autumn statement is increased capital expenditure for Scotland—although it would be good to hear from the cabinet secretary, when he winds up, exactly what the matched funding for the sleeper will do. Although we are getting extra, it seems that we will have to put quite a lot of it into the sleeper. It is a worthy objective, but it means that the extra is not as much as it seems.
The big capital expenditure document this week is the infrastructure investment plan, which, on a cursory reading, seems to me to be the longest wish list in history. I do not see how it is affordable, if revenue payments are to be kept within 5 per cent of the budget. However, the key things about the document are that it ought to be costed and that it must set priorities. My main advice to the Scottish Government would be to give up its obsession with road building and focus on housing in the next two or three years.
We heard this week that Edinburgh could not meet its 2012 homelessness target, and that there will be a 30 per cent cut to the affordable housing budget. My simple message to the Scottish Government today is this: prioritise housing.
At the start of my speech, I castigated the UK Government for penalising those on low incomes and sabotaging growth in the economy. Prioritising housing is a way of supporting those who are disadvantaged while simultaneously boosting the economy. Of course the Scottish Parliament needs more financial powers to enable it to do more, but that should not blind us to what we can do with the powers that we have at present. Prioritising housing will help the economy and help those who are disadvantaged. That should be the immediate priority for the extra capital that we are getting.
16:07
I welcome the motion in the name of John Swinney, and I welcome this Scottish Government debate on the UK Government’s autumn statement. I am pleased that the Scottish Government has highlighted the issue of how it needs to prioritise Scotland’s infrastructure in its detailed infrastructure spending programme.
The Scottish Government, in its current thinking and programme for government, has spelled out the need to reindustrialise parts of Scotland. When we consider the future, we see that there is more that the Scottish Government can do. However, Scotland needs the instruments to do the job of investing in our physical environment. In moving Scotland forward, it is vital that we attract investment, and the Scottish Government has flagged up its key commitments, especially the need for a Scottish growth strategy, focused on growth sectors and markets.
This debate on the impact of the autumn budget statement on Scotland’s economy and on the targeting of capital investment has to be put in the context of a highly political agenda being advanced by the UK Government, with the focus on cuts being all important. Economic commentators, especially Professor Danny Blanchflower of Dartmouth College, have criticised the UK Government’s approach. The UK Government’s financial policies—with their focus on the age of austerity and “We are all in this together”—are starting to ring hollow. I note that last week, Danny Alexander, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, was trying to downplay the impact that the UK Government’s budget cuts would have.
In considering the autumn statement, we can see that the promotion of growth is clearly not happening. In fact, growth is flat. The Office for Budget Responsibility forecasts a growth rate of 0.9 per cent this year, followed by 0.7 per cent in 2012. Overall, it is estimated that the autumn statement policy announcements will cost the Exchequer a mere £30 billion in total over the next three years, from 2012-13 to 2014-15. Equally, Mr Osborne intends to pay for some of the increased infrastructure spending that he announced by lower spending on public sector pay and tax credits. During the three years from 2012-13 to 2014-15, the autumn statement will raise capital spending by £3.76 billion, while current spending will be cut by £3.82 billion.
The unionist parties have constantly failed to recognise that the Scottish Government’s budget has been cut by £1.3 billion and that £800 million of the cuts directly affect the capital budget elements in the Scottish Government’s financial settlement.
In that context, I welcome the UK Government’s recognition that, under the current legislative framework, the Scottish Government is severely limited in its borrowing powers. The Scotland Bill, which is undergoing parliamentary scrutiny and contains proposals to extend the current borrowing powers and introduce new capital borrowing powers from 2013, might be a step in the right direction. The proposed transfer of additional powers on taxation and spending to the Scottish Parliament is welcome. The approach is better than the current arrangements but falls far short of what is necessary to stimulate economic growth in Scotland.
Will the member recommend to his colleagues that they support the Scotland Bill, in light of the proposals on additional borrowing?
Mr Rennie should know that, although the Scotland Bill represents a welcome move by the UK Government, it does not go far enough towards the ultimate aim of the Parliament, which should be independence.
A key undertaking of the Scottish Government is that it will deal with the reality of renewing Scotland’s infrastructure. Increased investment in our capital stock ensures good value and maintains the public pound principle. Procurement is crucial and is even more relevant in the current economic situation, especially as the euro zone’s troubles continue to impact on the UK economy.
The Scottish Government’s capital spending programme and strategic policy objectives do not operate in a void. Scotland is severely constrained under the current devolved settlement. That is even more apparent in the context of changes to the Scottish block grant that the UK Government announced in its June 2010 budget. The growth of Scotland’s companies has been severely tested in the recent economic climate and certain sectors are increasingly exposed to the economic downturn.
I welcome the debate and look forward to many of the issues that have been raised being addressed in the coming months and years, so that we can develop a programme and a strategy that genuinely benefit the wider Scottish economy and every community and household in Scotland. I commend the programme that the cabinet secretary outlined. We need aspiration and ambition for Scotland’s economy to continue to develop and to attract private investment, to secure sustainable growth and employment, now and in future.
16:13
As most people who have picked up an economics text know, aggregate demand is comprised of consumer spending, or consumption, as well as investment, Government spending and the difference between exports and imports—that is, the trade balance.
We know that consumer spending is depressed and that the increase in VAT has played a large part in that. We know that benefit cuts and contracting public sector employment will have a direct impact on sales in shops and on general economic activity and will therefore continue to depress consumer spending, as will the 3.2 per cent average increase in pension contributions, as we heard during the debate last week. On Willie Rennie’s point about pensions, the 5.2 per cent increase is linked to the consumer prices index. There might be a generous cash increase, but it will be wiped out by inflation.
The UK Government seems hellbent on curtailing investment in sectors such as oil and gas, given its £2 billion tax raid. How will such an approach reduce energy prices for consumers in the longer term? The U-turn on carbon capture and storage will also depress investment in the private sector. Meanwhile, the failure of quantitative easing and project Merlin to encourage greater bank lending is increasingly clear. The announcement of credit-easing measures to release funding for small and medium-sized enterprises was welcome, but it is probably too little, too late.
Government spending is, of course, a key area and we have influence over that. As Scotland has no scope to borrow, the Scottish economy will suffer the full effects of the UK Government cut to the block grant—both the cut in resource and the 32 per cent cut to the capital budget. That is having a profound impact on consumer and business confidence and is adding fuel to the fire created by uncertainty over the systemic risk to the banking sector posed by the euro zone crisis.
It seems that George Osborne has pinned all on trade and exports. Although there have been some marked successes in expanding Scotland’s exports of food and drink—especially Scotch whisky, on which we have had some very welcome news—other markets are clearly depressed. There was some reason for optimism initially, but the downturn in key European markets could place a drag on growth in Scotland and we are already seeing business confidence drop. Across most components of demand, unless the UK changes tack—and fundamentally so—we face continued downward pressures.
George Osborne offers only a limited loosening of capital budgets but, crucially, two thirds of the new capital investment will not be available until 2013 or later, despite the urgent need for stimulus this year and next, and we do not, as others have said, have the detail yet on transfer of resource to capital spend, so the overall impact is unknown at this stage. By contrast, despite a brutal cut of 32 per cent in Scotland’s capital budget this year, the Scottish Government, through its own switch from resource to capital and through the £2.5 billion NPD programme operated by the Scottish Futures Trust, will support around £9 billion of capital spending over the next three years to deliver schools, hospitals, houses, roads, water infrastructure and much else. The overall impact of those measures is that overall capital spend will increase for the duration of the spending review period.
The member talks about the lack of borrowing by the UK Government. Does he not recognise that the stable conditions that we created in 2010 have led to the low interest rates and the low yields that allow us to borrow at all and allow us to keep the UK economy relatively stable?
Willie Rennie’s point is reasonable in that, obviously, confidence in the ability to repay debt is important in keeping the interest rate down, but markets will also take into account the overall prospects for growth and, if they feel that growth is collapsing, that will have a detrimental impact on our ability to borrow as well, so he should be careful about that position.
To give just two local examples, in the Scottish Borders and Midlothian the Borders rail project will be completed under the stewardship of Network Rail, while in Kilmarnock there will be a new campus for Kilmarnock College, which we heard only last Friday will be a key element in the regeneration of the Diageo site there. I, too, very much welcome the Scottish Government’s infrastructure investment plan, which provides crucial support for employment. Others have said clearly that it will have a positive economic impact. As the Finance Committee heard from the Scottish Futures Trust, it makes good economic sense to invest now while construction prices are lower than they have been for some time.
This week, the Scottish attitudes survey, to which Kenny Gibson referred, highlighted that Scots would vote two to one in favour of independence if they could be as little as £500 per annum better off. I have every confidence that that will be the case, but to see one example of where Con-Dem policies harm Scotland at the moment, we need look no further than fuel duty. The cost of fuel has increased by about 16 per cent since the Con-Dems came to office in 2010. That has led to increased financial pressure on farmers and hauliers. It has increased the cost of delivering public services, such as public transport, emergency services and many health and social service activities, which rely on transport. Crucially, the higher cost of fuel has taken money out of families’ pockets and constrained high street spending. It has driven price inflation in productive sectors, as the cost of getting goods to market has increased substantially, and it has hit tourism, as it has become more expensive for tourists from the rest of the UK, Ireland and continental Europe to visit Scotland, particularly those areas that are ill served by public transport. Although the cancellation of the increase in fuel duty in January is welcome, I ask the UK Government to consider cancelling August’s proposed increase as well, because we simply cannot bear that.
In concluding, I want to add to Malcolm Chisholm’s point about child poverty. I certainly agree with Save the Children that the Parliament should make a clear statement condemning the decision to cut child tax credits and I ask the UK Government to consider that.
16:19
Unfortunately, Mr Swinney’s motion follows the usual Scottish Government mantra: UK, bad, Scotland, good. However, to be fair, it would not be too hard to portray the current state of affairs in that way, because the Tory-Liberal coalition’s handling of the UK economy has been so bad that—dare I say it?—it makes even the current Scottish Government’s policies look good by comparison. The coalition insists that it is dealing with problems that the previous Government created, which conveniently downplays the part played by the greedy and incompetent bankers at home and abroad.
Will the member give way?
No, I want to move on.
Meanwhile, the Scottish Government is torn between criticising the Tories and joining them in peddling the myths about the nature of our economic problems. The coalition’s entire economic strategy has been built on myths. There is the myth that British public debt, which is currently about 80 per cent of GDP, is at an unprecedented and unsustainable level, when in reality it is similar to that of many other developed nations and considerably less than that of some.
Will the member give way?
No, I want to move on.
It is right to be concerned about the level of debt, but hysterical and excessive responses are counterproductive and have given rise to the further myth that we need to slash hard and deep, which just destroys our ability to generate the wealth with which to repay debt. That myth is reinforced by the myth that public finances are out of control and public services waste money. The real waste is ditching services for the sake of a slash-and-burn ideology.
As Glenn O’Hara of the Oxford Brookes University notes,
“Recent history repeatedly shows that the combination of background inflation, resurgent growth and the establishment of a sound plateau for public spending are actually much more likely to be effective over the medium term.”
Perhaps George Osborne should go back to Oxford to learn the lessons of history. His misdiagnoses and flawed prescriptions have hindered recovery.
There are some signs in the autumn statement, however, that the chancellor has got a fright. Perhaps the OBR’s analysis has made him think again. If so, maybe our Cabinet Secretary for Finance, Employment and Sustainable Growth could benefit from having an OBR in Scotland.
Alongside the downwards revision of growth expectations, George Osborne has decided to take a small step away from disaster. He is trying to stimulate growth by investing in infrastructure, although by far less than he cut, and by making business borrowing easier, although he is not tackling bankers head on—even action on bonuses has been abandoned. Sadly, the abandonment of child tax credit rises and other measures will make low to middle-income families worse off and increase child poverty.
The continuing negativity of the Government also depresses consumer and business confidence, making it even harder for business to grow. George Osborne somehow fails to grasp that confidence matters when it comes to growth and that he needs to stimulate both. The OBR report makes it clear that, because of the chancellor’s low-growth policies, borrowing will be much higher than that projected under the previous Government and much higher than the chancellor predicted. Mr Osborne’s answer to the failure of his austerity programme is more austerity and making the public sector pay for the bankers’ mistakes.
The Scottish Government, too, is critical of cuts, such as those in public sector pensions, but when SNP members had the opportunity to do something, what did they do? They passed on the cuts. They were notable by their absence from the picket lines during the recent strike, and their solidarity with and support for public sector workers stops with criticism of the UK Government. Teachers, hospital workers, refuse collectors and dinner ladies were not the cause of the financial crisis; bankers were. However, while plans to tax and trim the casino bankers’ bonuses are abandoned, public sector workers are being made to pay for the consequences of the bankers’ mistakes.
On the one hand, the Scottish Government has been critical of the Con-Dems but, on the other hand, it is aiding and abetting them with its own additional cuts agenda. There has been a 20 per cent cut in funding for colleges, a £319 million cut in real terms to the national health service budget and a 50 per cent cut to the social housing budget. In addition, there is very little to show for the Scottish Government’s spending on jobs and the economy, with 100,000 young people unemployed and no overall reduction in child poverty since 2007. Perhaps the Scottish Government’s mantra might more accurately be: UK Government bad, Scottish Government not so good.
16:25
The best way to attack the Tories on the damage that they are doing to Scotland is not to fire bullets at the SNP but to combine with the SNP and turn our focus on the UK Tory-Liberal Democrat coalition. The approach that John Pentland takes makes the Labour Party apologists for the savage cuts that are coming to Scotland. That is not a fig leaf that Labour can hide behind.
We could agree that the autumn budget statement was too little, too late. However, John Pentland is not willing to accept that.
I want to look at the autumn statement not in terms of capital expenditure but in terms of the piecemeal and fragmented nature of the announcements that were made. For example, the UK youth contract, which Mr Rennie mentioned, will receive £940 million over the spending review period, but only £6 million a year will accrue to Scotland in Barnett consequentials.
Does the member not realise that almost £100 million is coming to Scotland? Even though it is not going into the SNP’s pockets, £100 million is going to businesses in Scotland.
That is not my understanding of the situation. I checked, and Scotland will receive £6 million in Barnett consequentials as a result of the spending on the UK youth contract, although I am willing to be corrected on that. If we scratch the surface of that youth contract, we see that it will provide 160,000 wage subsidies across the UK—I point out to Mr Rennie that that is a UK-wide figure—to encourage the private sector to take on young employees. Each subsidy is worth £2,275. Although that could be welcomed, the initiative raises a number of questions. Will that merely be a wage subsidy for a job that would have been created anyway? Will it artificially create jobs that are not sustainable? How long will a young person need to be employed before the cash payment is made? Will there be a clawback if that subsidy mechanism is abused by employers? Will there be any training requirements? Those are all reasonable questions to ask if we want to ensure that the policy stimulates economic growth, and I hope that those issues can be resolved.
I contend that it is the Scottish Government that is best placed to resolve those issues in Scotland. I believe that it has a track record in the area. It already has experience of providing a £1,000 subsidy to encourage employers to take on apprentices whose apprenticeship has ceased because of the UK economic crisis. In 2010-11 alone, that has benefited 1,295 apprentices and companies.
In April 2011, £2.5 million was announced for an extra £1,000 subsidy for companies in Scotland that employ fewer than 50 staff and have particular challenges in taking on extra employees. That is already happening in Scotland, under an SNP Government. Also worth noting is the hugely successful small business bonus scheme, which has helped 85,000 of our very smallest firms to the tune of £1,500, on average—some have received several thousand pounds more than that.
If we add to that the opportunities for all scheme for all 16 to 19-year-olds as well as the 25,000 modern apprenticeships a year, it is undoubtedly true that the Scottish Government has created a dynamic network of support for those who are out of work and for our small business sector. Therefore, when more money is being directed at that area, I would suggest that the Scottish Government is best placed to direct how that money is spent. I say that not because I want to start some constitutional turf war but because it just makes sense—it is the right thing to do, because the Scottish Government has the appropriate track record.
Of course, we can only do so much to stimulate growth. That is why many of the SNP speakers this afternoon have been talking about capital expenditure as a lever to stimulate growth. Again, Scotland has a track record in that regard, and everyone should listen to the facts. When the Scottish Government accelerated capital expenditure in the construction sector, there was a 22 per cent increase in employment in that sector in Scotland when the equivalent figure was falling by 5 per cent across the UK. Capital acceleration and expenditure works, and the UK Tory-Lib Dem Government should learn that lesson from the Scottish Government.
I am delighted that we have put our ambitions out there for £60 billion of capital expenditure in the next 20 years. To those who say that that money is not being spent just now, I say that they should learn the basics—
Will the member give way?
I am in my last minute. They should learn the basics of economics.
Gavin Brown rose—
The member is in his concluding minute.
I will give members one example: £285 million has been invested to fully modernise the Glasgow subway system, but that work, which has been going on for years, will not be completed until 2019. That is how major infrastructure investment is designed and carefully planned. The Scottish Government has a track record in creating employment and stimulating economic growth. If only we had the real powers to borrow to raise that capital expenditure and stimulate the Scottish economy, then my goodness we would be in a better place.
16:31
I welcome the tone of the finance secretary’s opening speech. I actually wrote in my speech that I regret the tone, because I was going by the motion—
Members: Oh!
—but I thought that his presentation was very appropriate, particularly in these difficult times.
What a recovery.
Yes—I underestimated Mr Swinney’s ability.
You certainly did, Ms Scanlon.
The first line of the Government’s motion notes the Office for Budget Responsibility’s reduction in the economic growth forecast. What many have failed to mention is the context of that reduced forecast as stated by the OBR. With higher than expected inflation due to sharp increases in global commodity prices, the enduring crisis in the euro zone producing the increased instability and uncertainty that we witness daily, and the impact—as Gavin Brown mentioned—of the 2008-09 financial crisis becoming even clearer, the conclusion is that the boom was bigger and the bust deeper, which means that the effects of the crash are lasting longer than was previously thought.
Even Tony Blair admitted in his book that, from 2005 onwards, Labour was insufficiently vigorous in limiting or eliminating the potential structural deficit. The Institute for Fiscal Studies stated—this has been mentioned today, but I do not apologise for raising it again—that
“If the unprecedented transparency of the OBR had been in existence over recent years, it might have discouraged Gordon Brown from persevering with fiscal forecasts that most independent analysts thought over-optimistic from 2002 onwards”.
Although we are addressing today the revised, lower growth figure from the OBR, it is at least an open, honest, factual, realistic and transparent figure.
The IMF and the OECD have both said that, without a reduction in the budget, there can be no sustained economic growth. Indeed, the UK Government’s plans are backed by the European Commission, the Confederation of British Industry, the Institute of Directors, the Federation of Small Businesses, the British Chambers of Commerce and many others. It is worth comparing the UK economy with others in the euro zone, as many members have done. Our unemployment rate is still too high at 8.3 per cent, but it is 2 per cent lower than the euro average. The rate in Austria is as low as 3.8 per cent, but the rates in Spain and Greece stand at 23 per cent and 18 per cent respectively.
The effect of the euro zone crisis cannot be overestimated and the full effects are not yet known, especially as British banks lent heavily to businesses and Governments in the euro zone’s worst trouble spots, as well as to French and German banks. Forty per cent of our exports are to euro zone countries, and as they experience their recessions, there is no doubt that they will drag down demand and affect our economy.
I make no apology for stating that the budget deficit that the coalition Government inherited was not only the largest in the G7 but the largest in the developed world, with the result that the UK Government is spending £120 million a day on debt interest alone. As Gavin Brown said, the chancellor’s management of the economy has secured the trust of both the credit rating agencies and the bond markets, and every pound that the UK Government saves will be spent on measures to support growth, improve fairness and help families.
Our amendment highlights a constructive and appropriate approach to the problems that we face, with a mixture of demand-led and supply-side policies. Bob Doris is welcome to read my copy of the autumn statement. Pages 53 to 57 are full of supply-side economics and capital infrastructure spending.
Raising the personal tax allowance this year to £7,500 and to £10,000 for people who are aged over 65 has taken more than 90,000 people in Scotland out of taxation, which is welcome as a demand-led policy, and the allowance will increase by more than 8 per cent next year, compared with the 2 per cent by which it used to increase under Labour.
The Scottish Government will also receive £433 million in additional funding. Its response that that is too little, too late is unfortunate and it is not in keeping with the tone that the cabinet secretary struck today, but I am sure that he will sort that out.
Scotland will also benefit from the commitment to the provision of cross-border rail services in partnership with the UK. The decision to defer the 3p increase in fuel duty is also welcome, particularly in the area that I represent and in the islands. The policies of credit easing, increased capital investment and investment to support infrastructure and enterprise zones are quite similar to the policies that are being implemented in the rest of the United Kingdom, and the increase in the bank levy will raise an additional £280 million a year.
Although I welcome the eventual investment in the A9, the A96 and Her Majesty’s Prison Inverness, I support the amendment in the name of Gavin Brown.
16:37
We often hear about the bankers’ mistakes and what the bankers have done. I am no friend of the bankers, but I remind members—particularly those on the Labour benches—that it was up to politicians to regulate the bankers. Tim Geithner, the United States Secretary of the Treasury, recently said that a lot of the problems with deregulation emanated from London and from Gordon Brown.
We are hearing a bit of revisionism. I remind the member that Alex Salmond said in The Times, in April 2007:
“We are pledging a light-touch regulation suitable to a Scottish financial sector with its outstanding reputation for probity, as opposed to one like that in the UK, which absorbs huge amounts of management time in ‘gold-plated’ regulation.”
A light touch is better than none at all, which is what happened under Labour.
Many Labour members still believe that Gordon Brown was the economic and financial messiah. However, in the words of Mrs Cohen from Monty Python’s “Life of Brian”:
“He’s not the messiah. He’s a very naughty boy!”
The sooner they learn that, the better.
I turn to the impact of the budget statement on my constituency and the city that I represent. The thing that really strikes me is its impact on the child tax credit, which was mentioned by Malcolm Chisholm and others. That will put 10,000 more Scots children into poverty, many of whom will be in my constituency. The figure is £40 million for nearly 400,000 children—I thank Save the Children for highlighting that for us. In complete contrast with the Scottish Government’s early intervention policy, that is early damnation. We, as a Parliament, must condemn that aspect of the statement.
Does Kevin Stewart welcome the Treasury’s statement that
“In future the Government will publish an assessment of progress on child poverty against the full range of indicators”?
That was never done under Labour.
I am not at all happy about that, because the UK Government is changing the measures. I am happy about the measures that Save the Children, rather than the Con-Dem coalition, wants.
Another aspect that affects my constituency is oil and gas taxation. I have talked previously in the chamber about the need for stability on that, to ensure that the North Sea sector continues to be vibrant. We heard nothing about that in the autumn statement, yet the chancellor is happy to take £54 billion in oil revenues in the next few years. This Parliament should control those moneys, so that we can make the right decisions for this country.
Well, have a referendum.
We will have a referendum, but not when Mrs Scanlon wants it—we will have it when we promised to, in the second half of the parliamentary session.
I welcome this week’s infrastructure announcements, which will be welcome throughout Aberdeen and the north-east. I want better rail links between Aberdeen and Inverness and between Aberdeen and the central belt. We were promised them many years ago by various other Governments, but nothing much came of that. I am confident that we will get the rail network right this time. Like Mr Doris, I welcome the fact that we are planning for future strategic infrastructure projects. That is the way to do it.
I hope that we will see the beginnings of the Aberdeen western peripheral route sooner rather than later. As many members have heard me say, that road was first planned in 1948. When we think that we will finally get it, somebody is always there to kibosh it. I hope that the court situation will be dealt with sooner rather than later, so that we can eventually get on with that infrastructure project.
Transport is a key part of infrastructure spend in the areas that many members represent. I disagree with Mr Chisholm’s point that we should not spend money on roads. The AWPR is vital to the economy of Aberdeen and the north-east. It would be wrong to say that no road building whatsoever should take place. When the Labour Party sums up, will somebody tell me what its plans are for road building and whether it commits to the AWPR?
I support the motion in Mr Swinney’s name and I hope that all other members will do so, too.
16:43
I welcome the opportunity to contribute to the debate. My colleague Richard Baker made an excellent speech in which he set out wider issues that relate to the economic crisis and the UK Government’s failure to respond. I will focus on the living wage and child poverty in the context of the economy. Kenneth Gibson said that the Scottish Government’s focus was on putting money in the pockets of the people who need it most, so perhaps we can look at the detail of how the Scottish Government intends to do that.
The living wage is important to me and my party, so I am pleased that the Local Government and Regeneration Committee started a mini-inquiry into the topic this morning. I hope that the committee will report in January on three key issues: poverty pay and low-paid work, how we address procurement matters effectively, and the need for political will to drive the issue forward.
Will the member give way?
I am happy to give way to John Mason.
The living wage is important, but does the member accept that, although a living wage is good, a minimum wage is better, because it affects the private sector as well?
The whole point of driving the living wage into the Scottish Government’s main workforce at the beginning is that it will eventually drive culture change in the private sector as well. We wanted to see the living wage in the Scottish Government and we are pleased that it has been delivered. We want to see it for directly employed local authority staff, and some progress remains to be made there. We want to see it implemented through tendered local authority contracts. When we get to that point, we will have a critical mass that will force change in the private sector. In order to make that journey, we need political leadership. My party differs from the member’s party in its willingness to drive that culture change all the way through the process.
Some 350,000 people in Scotland earn less than £7.20 an hour. It is a huge challenge for us to address that, particularly as it is those people who are most susceptible to the pressures of the cost of living such as increases in VAT and so on. The living wage has value and benefits for employers through reduced sickness, a more stable workforce and better performance. There is also value in the increased life chances and experience of the workers themselves. That is important to the local economy because of the buying power of low-paid workers. All the evidence points to the fact the lowest paid spend most of their money in their local economy. If we raise their wages, we are supporting and stabilising our local economies and the communities that we are here to represent. The Scottish living wage campaign report states that, for every £1 of the living wage, £1.63 is generated in the local economy. That makes an important point about the relevance of the living wage to all the economic issues that we are discussing.
There are many workforce-related issues in Labour’s amendment, but I would like the Scottish Government to commit to a living wage to address some of the wider issues that we talk about. Six out of 10 children who live in poverty come from households in which at least one parent or guardian is working, so child poverty is an important economic issue. When the Joseph Rowntree Foundation gave evidence as part of the Local Government and Regeneration Committee’s living wage inquiry this morning, it stated that child poverty costs the UK economy £25 billion a year. That is the cost of providing services to children who are living in poverty and covering the loss of earnings by those adults who have not made it into the labour market. The Joseph Rowntree Foundation said that £17 billion of that money could be brought back directly to the Exchequer if we meet the target to eradicate child poverty by 2020. My party and I therefore believe that child poverty and the living wage are not just about social justice; they are economic issues that are fundamental to how we restructure—
Will the member take an intervention?
I am afraid that I do not have time. I apologise to Mr Gibson.
That is why I am so disappointed to see the UK Government do two key things. The first was to scrap the proposed increase in child tax credit. Kevin Stewart mentioned that earlier. The second was to drop the commitment that was enshrined in the Child Poverty Act 2010, which is barely a year old, to measure poverty in relative terms. The UK Government’s own figures show that child poverty is likely to increase by 100,000.
I would go a bit further than Mr Stewart and say that the Scottish Government has a duty to play its part in challenging the changes to the child tax credit arrangements. Furthermore, I seek an assurance from the cabinet secretary that the Scottish Government will continue to measure child poverty in relative terms and will not seek to change the way in which it counts children who are living in poverty.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies has said that it is now inconceivable that the UK Government will meet its 2020 target, so I would welcome it if the Scottish Government would take the opportunity to update us on its progress towards eradicating child poverty in Scotland. If it cannot do that today, perhaps it could say when it is likely to produce its first annual report into child poverty, which it committed to doing in the child poverty strategy that was published at the end of the previous session of Parliament.
Progress towards addressing child poverty in Scotland is “stubbornly static” in the words of Save the Children. In fact, it has not moved in Scotland since 2005. With the welfare reform agenda and the proposed UK Government cuts, it is becoming ever more important that we seek to address that. I challenge the Scottish Government to revisit its child poverty strategy to make sure that it is fit for purpose in the new circumstances in which we find ourselves.
I am grateful for the opportunity to contribute to today’s debate and I look forward to hearing the Scottish Government address some of the issues that Labour members have raised.
16:49
It is important to consider the economic backdrop to the debate. John Swinney was absolutely correct to say that the UK economy remains in a very fragile condition; indeed, we heard in the autumn budget statement that the Office for Budget Responsibility has revised down its GDP growth forecasts for the coming years. Significantly weaker growth is now expected this year and next year. It has been forecast that the UK economy will grow by just 0.9 per cent this year, 0.7 per cent next year, and up to 2.1 per cent the year after.
The Office for Budget Responsibility does not believe that the UK economy will fall back into recession, as the OECD predicted, but it has predicted that output will be negative in the last quarter of 2011 and that there will be only very weak growth at the start of next year. It is quite clear that there are rather negative economic conditions.
There is an expectation that between the first quarter of this year and the first quarter of 2016, UK general Government employment will fall by more than 600,000. In last week’s pensions debate, I mentioned that I was at the Public and Commercial Services Union picket line at Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs in Cumbernauld, where very real concerns were expressed to me about the cuts that we will see in the UK Government workforce. That stands in stark contrast to the Scottish Government’s stated aim of having no compulsory redundancies.
It would be remiss of me not to pick up on John Pentland’s point about the Scottish Government’s position on pensions. If he had been bold enough to take my intervention, I would have said then what I am about to say. Perhaps he will be bold enough to take an intervention by the end of the parliamentary session—or perhaps not. He was in danger of trotting out the Willie Rennie line of argument, which he would not have heard, as he was not at last week’s debate. Willie Rennie might think that that is a good place to be, but I do not think that the rest of us—including Mr Pentland, I am sure—think that it is a particularly good place to be. The Scottish Government had absolutely no choice: it had no room for manoeuvre on pensions. How could it have any room to manoeuvre?
Willie Rennie rose—
I see that Willie Rennie is trying to intervene on me again. I will let him in in a minute. That will be the third time that he has intervened on me on the matter.
Mr Pentland fails to acknowledge Danny Alexander’s threatening letter. Some £550 million would be removed from the Scottish Government’s budget over the next few years. Richard Baker recognised that position, and he has previously accepted the difficulties for the Scottish Government.
Did the member not listen to the radio programme from St Andrews that John Swinney and I were on together? He admitted in that radio programme that he has a choice on pension contributions.
I missed that radio programme. I am always happy to listen to Mr Swinney; to be courteous, I will leave the other part of the equation unspoken.
One area in which the Scottish Government has flexibility is public sector pay. The cabinet secretary did not mention public sector pay, but it is mentioned in the autumn statement. Does Mr Hepburn support the Osborne line or will he appeal to the cabinet secretary to move much further on public sector pay?
Mr Findlay has signally failed to recall the cabinet secretary’s budget statement. The cabinet secretary hopes to end the pay freeze next year. He has not taken forward a pay freeze with relish. I hear Mr Findlay chuntering from the sidelines—it might be better for him to listen for once in his life. Mr Findlay fails to acknowledge the context that the Scottish Government has found itself in, which was, of course, begun under his party. Let us not forget that 85 per cent of the cuts to the Scottish budget were planned under his Government.
I return to the autumn statement. UK borrowing in this year is now expected to be £127 billion, which is £5 billion higher than the OBR forecast in March and £11 billion higher than it forecast in June 2010. I am not critical of that borrowing per se. Indeed, the cabinet secretary has previously called for £20 billion of borrowing for targeted measures, which would have been very sensible. However, it would have been much better if that borrowing had come earlier. The fact that we are seeing that borrowing now demonstrates the folly of the UK Government’s position. We have consistently heard from those on the Conservative benches—and, today, from the Conservative adjunct, Willie Rennie—that that approach is entirely necessary. It fails to recognise, however—[Interruption.] Indeed, Mr Rennie might as well move down to the Tory front bench. He is being invited to do so; why does he not respond to that call?
That approach fails to recognise that many others have been suggested. Different approaches have been put forward by the Scottish Government, by the trade unions and by others on investing in economic recovery. Different approaches have been suggested by leading economists such as Paul Krugman and Joseph Stiglitz. I could say a lot more, but I have had to deal with some interesting interventions. I look forward to hearing what the cabinet secretary has to say at the end of the debate.
16:55
In households in the west of Scotland, and across Scotland, budgets are being squeezed more than ever, especially at this time of year. Rising fuel and food prices are constantly on the minds of businesses and households alike. Last year, the Greenock Telegraph started its petrol and diesel watch campaign, which provides a great service to Inverclyde and the surrounding communities by printing the price of fuel at filling stations throughout Inverclyde and the neighbouring towns on a daily basis. As members will know, I have lodged a motion on this issue and, following the vote tonight, I am hoping to have a member’s business debate on it next week.
Last week’s decision not to introduce the 3p increase on fuel duty was welcome. However, the chancellor is still committed to introducing it next August, and there is much more to be done to encourage him not to do so. Welcome though the delayed introduction—and, I hope, postponement—of the fuel duty increase is, it represents a short-term fix in an area that requires fundamental restructuring. People in Scotland have long campaigned for a fairer fuel duty regime, and the SNP has led calls for the establishment of a fuel duty regulator. Unfortunately, those calls have been rejected time and again in Westminster.
We all know that the European economic situation is not in good shape. We read and hear daily of the increasing difficulties facing the European economies. Last week’s downgrading by the OBR of growth forecasts over the coming three years made it clear that the UK Government’s actions so far are just not working. Capital projects help to stimulate jobs and economies, but the chancellor’s autumn statement last week was a missed opportunity for Scotland. An expanded £2 billion of capital infrastructure expenditure in Scotland to help offset the 32 per cent real-terms cut to Scotland’s capital budget would have provided a good opportunity for the chancellor. As the cabinet secretary said, every £100 million invested in capital generates £160 million and 1,400 jobs in the wider economy. That kind of investment is even more vital in the current economic climate.
A theme is now well established, however. When action is required, the UK Government is lethargic, and when it sees fit to act, it does so using broad strokes that are ill tailored to Scotland. Last week’s announcements did not break with that tradition. Until the people of Scotland have full control of their own affairs, we will be forced to await such announcements from the chancellor with more than a little trepidation, year after year, knowing that despite the Scottish Government’s best efforts, Westminster can continue to ignore and undermine proposals that are in the best interests of Scotland.
The member is critical of the UK Government, and of course praises to the hilt the Scottish Government. Will he tell us why growth in Scotland has been slower than in the rest of the UK since the recession?
As Gavin Brown knows, the full economic powers still lie with Westminster. This Parliament does not have the full range of economic powers to deal with these situations better.
While the Scottish Government continues to take positive action to provide security for the people of Scotland by freezing council tax, abolishing prescription charges and protecting concessionary travel, the Westminster coalition pays little attention to Scotland. The coalition continues to squander billions on nuclear weapons, it has decided to keep the rate of VAT for building repairs and maintenance work at 20 per cent instead of reducing it to 5 per cent, and one week after the announcement in the UK Parliament, this Parliament is still waiting to hear what the consequentials actually are. It is little wonder that the people of Scotland are increasingly of the opinion that the UK Government’s one-size-fits-all approach to fiscal policy does not suit Scotland as much as the Westminster coalition would like us to believe.
There is one issue where one size does not fit all. The public sector in Scotland is 15 per cent bigger than it is in the rest of the United Kingdom. If the SNP gets independence, will it raise the size of the public sector or maintain it?
I think that Mary Scanlon knows that that is a factually inaccurate question.
Willie Rennie said that households in Scotland know the challenges that face our economy. I whole-heartedly agree with that comment, but I also know that the people of Scotland are aware of the economic potential of our country and that, if we ran our own affairs, we would improve Scotland’s economy compared with what Willie Rennie would like to continue.
Scotland is already the most competitive environment for business in the UK, and the enormous and increasing investment from companies such as Dell, Amazon and Doosan comes as no surprise to those who want nothing other than to see Scotland flourish.
I am conscious of the time, so I will conclude by touching on one other point. John Pentland spoke of increasing borrowing. I agree with him that the UK borrowing level is way too high, but I suggest that he looks at the House of Commons table of borrowing figures. It shows that, under Labour, central Government gross debt was 49.3 per cent of GDP in 1997. It went down to 38.5 per cent in 2003, which was a good thing, but it was 77.2 per cent in 2010. I do not think that Labour can say anything positive about debt and borrowing to this Parliament.
17:01
The autumn budget signalled the day that the coalition Government finally dropped its pretence of being the greenest Government ever. In his statement, George Osborne was blatant in his support for energy-intensive industries while pulling the rug from under the fledgling solar industry.
In Scotland, we welcome Government commitments to an ambitious renewables programme and climate emission reduction targets. We support the moves announced in yesterday’s capital spending plans relating to district heating schemes that will provide cheap heat to households where before it was wasted, and broadband infrastructure that will connect people and businesses and reduce the need to travel. Projects such as investment in rail transport infrastructure are key to reducing our dependence on private cars.
We must make more of opportunities such as those available via a subsea grid connection across the North Sea to let us trade electricity efficiently with the rest of Europe, and closer to home we must help to enable the creation of local energy companies in every council area in Scotland. There is a great opportunity to generate energy locally and renewably, boosting both jobs and revenue for vital public services.
We must demonstrate a commitment to a fitter, healthier and cleaner Scotland by properly funding cycling infrastructure—a spend-to-save measure on many levels. If we are to tackle the climate crisis, we need more such projects, phasing out dependence on carbon-intensive industries while increasing desperately needed employment opportunities. Political will should divert finance away from fossil fuels and towards viable alternative jobs for workers from the carbon-intensive industries, and all government spending plans should reflect that.
What does the autumn statement have to say about challenging inequality? Er, not a lot. Although it is surely a central pillar of the economic recovery, the UK Government fails even to address it in the autumn statement, while taking £250 million away from hard-pressed families. The UK Government has confirmed that it will not support a financial transactions tax, such as the Robin Hood tax, or offer anything new to tackle tax avoidance and evasion. Big businesses and millionaires will not feel the pinch in the way that those on low earnings will. Although we do not have the power to raise a transaction tax, the lack of social justice shown by the UK Government cannot be replicated in Scotland. There is a green alternative to the public sector cuts, which are damaging the private sector, too, as consumer confidence plummets and businesses suffer.
There is an alternative to the gloomy financial forecasts: fairer taxation, more equal distribution of wealth, a radical energy efficiency programme and an economy on a local scale. Land value tax, which is a fairer form of taxation, is a progressive alternative to council tax that would bring more land into useful social and economic activity.
The jobs deficit must be addressed. Jobs are key and we have to create a new generation of them for young people. In Scotland we appreciate and understand that ripping up regulation is not the way to create new jobs. We must target our efforts where they will make the biggest difference: on new green jobs in the fledgling energy efficiency sector and the green industries and green technologies of the future.
I call Anne McTaggart, who has a brief two or three minutes.
17:05
Given that I have only a short time—although I am grateful for it—I will amalgamate what I was going to say into a couple of points for the cabinet secretary to address in his closing speech.
I rise to support Richard Baker’s amendment and to say that I am aghast and sad that although we are nearing the end of this debate, the main and worst affected group has not been given proper mention. The fact is well researched that women, who make up two thirds of public sector employees, will bear the brunt of the tax credit changes. In 2014-15, the changes will potentially lead to women losing around £687 million, compared to men losing £388 million. That is the biggest attack on women in a generation. One of our Labour colleagues, Yvette Cooper, is quoted as saying:
“the chancellor’s plans hit women more than twice as hard as men”.
I would like the cabinet secretary to address those points in his closing speech and outline some of the measures that he hopes to put in place to redress the situation.
I am grateful. Thank you very much. We now move to closing speeches.
17:07
This has been another entertaining debate. At least we have the Labour members and the Green members here this week. I am disappointed that they missed last week’s fiery exchange between this side and the SNP. It was an interesting exchange that showed the paucity of arguments from the SNP in defence of its position.
We heard first from the great Kenny Gibson. Only he could dismiss the biggest increase ever in the pension as something that was not worthy of support. Only the SNP would have the nerve to do that.
Will the member take an intervention?
Not just now.
Kenny Gibson referred to Norway as the great country that we should follow. Has he not listened to comrade Joan McAlpine, who now reckons that it is all about Alaska? SNP members are looking puzzled; they have obviously not read Joan McAlpine’s weekly article in The Scotsman, in which she recommended that Scotland aim to follow Alaska. The SNP should be a bit more careful, however, as Alaska does not have a national health service to which Scotland would aspire.
Malcolm Chisholm made a very thoughtful contribution in which he talked clearly about child poverty, which I, as a Liberal Democrat, am extremely concerned about. Some of the measures that we in the UK Government have introduced are dealing with some of that, but I recognise some of the issues that Malcolm Chisholm raises. He also said quite rightly that the infrastructure plan was the longest wish list in history.
John Wilson ignored the relative stability of the UK Government and the decisions that it has made, which have delivered some of the lowest yields on borrowing in the world. At least Paul Wheelhouse did not ignore that; he at least recognised—in what I have to say was a pretty depressing speech—that there was some merit in the argument that the UK Government had brought stability.
Mary Scanlon is becoming one of my best friends. She made a strong case for the UK Government. [Interruption.] If SNP members would listen now, they might learn a little bit more. In a thoughtful contribution, she cited some of the context for the economic growth figures. I did not think that I would hear it from her, but she mentioned Tony Blair, who admitted the Labour Government’s inability to deal more rigorously with the situation at the time. We should be pleased that we have the Office for Budget Responsibility, because it gives us a much more objective view. Robert Chote should not be dismissed as someone of no consequence; he has tremendous merit as a former director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies. We should not belittle the OBR in the way that some SNP members have done.
In addition, Mary Scanlon highlighted the fact that the UK Government spends £120 million on interest every day, which is something else that we should not ignore.
I take the view that the OBR is a highly beneficial innovation that strengthens public policy. However, it says that the UK Government’s autumn statement will have no positive impact on growth. What does the member think about that?
If the member feels that he has a contribution to make to the debate, perhaps he should intervene on some of the members of his own party.
The OBR has recognised the necessity of the statement that the chancellor made last week. I would like to hear what Mr Swinney reckons the yields would be in the UK if we followed his advice to spend an extra £20 billion. What would the yield rates in the UK be?
The proposal that I put forward for £20 billion of additional borrowing is a modest one. The chancellor is to undertake additional borrowing of £158 billion. My proposal is perfectly sustainable and it would deliver higher growth than would the UK Government’s approach.
Mr Swinney is a wiser man than that, so he should know that the UK has the yield rates that it has because of the decisions that the UK Government took in its early days to bring stability to the economy. Mr Swinney is suggesting that we should borrow £20 billion over and above—not instead of—what we are borrowing already. What would the effect be on yield rates in the UK if we followed his advice?
I will tell Mr Rennie what the effect would be: it would be that we would have an ability to generate higher taxation revenues from economic growth. That is what is being stifled by the UK Government’s approach.
If we followed Mr Swinney’s advice, we could well go down the spend, spend, spend route of Greece, Italy and Portugal. [Interruption.]
Order.
It is worth reflecting on the extra spending commitments that members have offered in the debate: a tax reduction for the oil and gas industry; £20 billion of extra spending; a VAT cut; a higher pension increase than £5.30; money for public sector pensions; and the cancellation of the August fuel duty increase. In addition, I presume from all the criticism of the UK spending announcements that members would like to reverse all those cuts as well. Just how credible is that?
17:13
I apologise to Mr Swinney for missing the first four minutes of his speech—I was detained elsewhere. I am extremely sorry about that, because it means that I cannot judge the accuracy of the unprecedented nature of the warm words that my colleague Mary Scanlon offered in praising Mr Swinney’s speech. Not since before the Moray by-election has Mary Scanlon been so nice to Mr Swinney. I am hopeful that we will see such a rapprochement in future debates on the economy.
I listened with great interest to what SNP back benchers had to say. They were long on criticism of what the coalition Government is doing in Westminster but short on alternative strategies. That is entirely in tune with the approach of the members of the SNP’s front bench, who claim that all the good news about the Scottish economy, whether it is new job announcements, unemployment statistics or inward investment, is down to the actions of the SNP Government, and that all the bad news is down to the actions of George Osborne and the coalition Government. I do not think that it is quite so simple.
They’re not even denying it.
Indeed—it is utterly brazen.
As he told the chamber again today, Mr Swinney thinks that the coalition Government is cutting too quickly and deeply. However, we have heard nothing from him about the level of cuts that would be acceptable or appropriate.
Will the member give way?
I would be delighted to.
I have been labouring this point with Mr Rennie for most of the afternoon. My proposition was that if the UK Government invested £20 billion more in capital investment over the next three years it would make a substantial contribution to assisting us in delivering growth in Scotland. That is a pretty straightforward statement of our demands.
Mr Swinney has given us one specific example but he has not set out any overall package that the UK Government should follow. If he is maintaining the position that the UK Government is cutting too quickly and deeply, is he now saying that that one proposal would, if followed, be enough for him to praise everything else that the coalition Government did? I think not.
For us on the Conservative benches, a highlight of the debate has been watching the SNP and Labour back benchers spend all their time attacking one another. In fact, they are so busy attacking one another that they seem to have hardly any time for attacking us. It is all very refreshing.
The outlook is a matter of concern. Members who, like me, attended at an ungodly hour this morning the presentation on business confidence by the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales and Grant Thornton will have heard about the sharp fall in such confidence across the UK and Scotland. However, in the past quarter, that fall has been driven not by domestic concerns but by the euro zone crisis. There is also good news—gross profits and exports for Scottish businesses are expected to rise—and, despite the loss of confidence, growth, albeit modest, is still expected.
Richard Baker did not touch at all on the cause of the current concern and completely ignored the fact that the euro zone crisis is driving down confidence right across the globe but particularly in Europe. The UK is the only major western country where credit ratings are improving.
It is funny that when this started it was all Labour’s fault and had nothing to do with the global economy; now it is the euro zone’s fault. Beyond that, however, how does Murdo Fraser explain the fact that, if it is the fault of the euro zone, why is growth in the euro zone superior to that in the UK?
Some countries in the euro zone have superior growth; others have poorer growth than us. Some start from a lower base than us; others do not. However, if we look across the euro zone, experience will tell us that countries with credible spending plans are in a stronger not weaker position. All of us—householders, mortgage payers and businesses—benefit from record low interest rates. As I pointed out earlier to Malcolm Chisholm, interest rates in Italy are now at 7.2 per cent. We are paying less than even Germany; indeed, as Gavin Brown reminded us, there is a threat to Germany’s triple A rating. A 1 per cent rise in interest rates would mean an extra £10 billion on mortgage bills annually, an extra £7 billion on business borrowing and an extra £21 billion on debt interest payments. Any interest rate rise is far more damaging than any advantage that we might get from higher spending or tax cuts funded by borrowing.
Incidentally, while we are on the subject of the euro, where are all the euro advocates now? Where are all those people who, 10 or 15 years ago, were telling us that we should join the euro? The SNP benches are absolutely full of them. Of course, if Scotland became an independent country, we might well have no alternative but to join the euro—at horrendous cost to our economy.
Like Mary Scanlon, I will briefly remind the chamber of the ways in which the autumn statement has been good for Scotland. New spending on infrastructure means £433 million in Barnett consequentials for the Scottish Government; there will be a national loan guarantee scheme of £20 billion to provide cheaper loans for business; there will be cuts in income tax for lower earners; the scrapping in January of the 3p rise in fuel duty will save 10p on fuel duty compared with where we would have been under Labour; there will be £50 million to support cross-border sleeper services; there will be a record increase in the basic state pension of £5.30, which is above the CPI rate; there will be a youth contract to help 40,000 youngsters find work and to provide employers with wage incentives; and there will be an urban broadband fund. All that great news to get the economy going should be welcomed, and I am delighted to support Gavin Brown’s amendment.
17:19
The debate has been interesting.
We believe that the UK Government’s economic strategy has failed. When the current UK Government came to power, Labour was taking the country out of recession, the economy was growing and unemployment was falling. The UK Government squandered that position by cutting too hard and too fast, creating a challenge for the Scottish Government. However, we in the Labour Party do not believe that the Scottish Government is using its powers adequately to make a difference in Scotland, which continues to lag behind the UK.
The Scottish Government should do a number of things. For example, the budget for affordable housing has been cut by 50 per cent, yet the SNP manifesto promised that 6,000 social rented houses would be built every year. The SNP Government has already reneged on that promise. Paul Wheelhouse talked about investing when construction costs are low, yet the housing budget has been cut—what an opportunity to grow our housing stock when costs are low.
We have called for retrofitting of energy efficiency measures. There is a 100 per cent target for electricity generation from renewables, but we must also implement energy efficiency measures to cut fuel poverty and meet our carbon emissions targets. The knock-on benefit of retrofitting would be more jobs for the Scottish economy—many would be local jobs that would help our communities. That is another opportunity that this Government has missed when it should be making the most of it.
Many members have talked about families losing out as a result of the autumn statement. Malcolm Chisholm, John Pentland and others talked about the terrifying cost to the UK economy of child poverty. We must put an end to child poverty, but in Scotland cuts were made to the fuel poverty budget last year. That budget will not catch up with spending in the previous year, which will lead to further poverty for families.
I was glad that Anne McTaggart got to speak, because she pointed out that the cuts in child tax credit in the UK have a bigger impact on women. In Scotland, the public sector cuts are having an impact on women, with fewer classroom assistants and home carers. The Scottish Government talks about there being no compulsory redundancies, but that does not mean that there are no cuts in hours. Women in part-time, low-paid jobs are bearing the brunt of those cuts, which is reflecting back on families.
The answer from Governments both here and in the UK on targets for child poverty and fuel poverty is to change the way in which those are calculated. That is a new and innovative way to meet a target. We hope that people step back from that approach. We need real targets that we can trace and which get rid of the effect of poverty in our communities. None of us should be complacent about that.
The Scottish Government talks about transferring resource to capital funding. We would agree with that, but the Scottish Government’s approach is more spin than fact. The capital savings arising from the new Forth crossing have been treated as a transfer from resource expenditure to capital, but the new Forth crossing is a capital project.
The Scottish Government also tells us about transfers from revenue to capital in the Scottish Enterprise and Highlands and Islands Enterprise budgets. When those organisations gave evidence to the Economy, Energy and Tourism Committee, they told us that they do that year on year—that the approach is nothing new, that it is not new capital and that the position is much the same as it was. Can we therefore have some new capital coming forward?
The Scottish Government published an infrastructure plan—a wish list—that focused on powers that it has not got rather than those that it has. In that infrastructure plan, there was no mention of the consequentials from the autumn statement. We would very much welcome seeing the detail. We would also welcome the Government’s response to the £50 million that has been put on the table for the Caledonian sleeper. Will that funding be matched? Will the proposed investment happen?
Delayed projects are reannounced in the infrastructure plan. The A9 upgrade has been announced on several occasions, but it is dependent on policies that have not been put in place. The previous SNP Government announced that the whole of the A9 would be dualled, but we are now told that that applies only as far as Inverness. What about the A9 between Inverness and Thurso? Will that be dualled, or is that another broken promise?
Does the member agree that if the Parliament had not agreed to squander £500 million on Edinburgh trams, some of the money could have been invested in upgrading the A9?
If I had had a pound for every time the SNP spent the Edinburgh trams money I could have dualled the A9 all the way to Thurso, and taken much pleasure in doing so.
I welcome the SNP’s extension of the road equivalent tariff to the Argyll islands, which the Labour Party was keen to do. However, what the SNP gives with one hand it removes with the other. It is removing RET from freight, which will stifle jobs growth on the islands and mean that companies on the islands face higher costs. The response to the plea from the northern isles for RET to be extended to them was fare rises. There is no fairness in what is happening.
Does the member agree that extending RET to Shetland and some of the Orkney routes would have the effect of higher costs, not lower costs, for passengers?
I agree, but that was the case with the Oban to Barra route. The SNP Government insists on calling the measure on that route RET; it is not RET but a discount. What the northern isles are getting instead of RET is a fare increase, not a discount. If they were getting a discount I would be happy to call it RET or indeed anything else, but that is not the case.
I was interested in what Kezia Dugdale said about the living wage, which I very much support. We need a procurement bill that enshrines the living wage in public sector contracts and ensures that people are paid a fair wage for the job. John Mason asked Kezia Dugdale whether a minimum wage is better than the living wage. SNP members could not get out of their beds to vote for the minimum wage and they are asleep on the job in implementing the living wage, so we will take no lessons from them.
The Labour Party has come forward with positive proposals for growth. It is important to the country that we grow employment. I make a plea to the Scottish Government, on a matter on which we might be able to unite. The UK Government said in the autumn statement that 10 cities will receive funding for superfast broadband. The cabinet secretary will be aware that the market will provide superfast broadband in cities. We need the money in rural areas, to give them a competitive advantage. I make a plea to the Government to consider moving the money from cities to rural areas.
The debate has been interesting, and we agree with the Scottish Government that the UK Government has got it wrong. However, it is not enough for the Scottish Government to pass the buck; it has the powers to make a difference in Scotland. This is not a time for posturing; it is a time for the Government to use the powers that it has.
17:28
For the greater part, the debate has been positive and constructive.
I will talk about a number of speeches, and I must start by talking about Rhoda Grant’s speech, which I regret. The point that Bob Doris made is significant. If there is no united front against the damage that is being done by the Tories and Liberals, particularly in fiscal terms, Scotland is weakened. I am old enough to remember the 1979 referendum debate, during which Helen Liddell, who I think at that stage was general secretary of the Labour Party in Scotland, memorably said that she would not soil her hands by working with the SNP. The result was a generation—no, two generations—in which the Tories ruled Scotland.
The lesson is that when we have a real enemy that is running down Scotland and destroying it, we have to work together.
Will the cabinet secretary give way?
I thank Mr Baker, but I will make some progress.
It is extremely important that we find the positives and emphasise them. We do not do so by making remarks such as we heard about the minimum wage and infrastructure projects. All that does is run things down. Mr Doris is right: in the circumstances the weakness of that argument means that Labour becomes the apologist for Tory misrule. That should not happen, because there were a number of very important speeches from Labour members that I want to explore.
Malcolm Chisholm made a number of extremely important points, some of which were echoed by Kezia Dugdale. I want to talk about child poverty in particular. Kezia Dugdale raised an extremely important point about relative child poverty, and I confirm at the outset that the Scottish Government commits itself to the targets in the Child Poverty Act 2010, including that of measuring relative poverty. That sounds as if it is a technical issue, but that is far from being the case. It actually means that the goalposts are being changed—that is the modest way to put it—and that the agreed measurement of child poverty, which allows us to see what progress is being made in this vital area, is being swept away.
The current measurement is that a child is living in poverty if they live in a household where the family income is less than 60 per cent of the median. That relative measurement is enshrined in law in the Child Poverty Act 2010, which all parties supported. The act includes other income measures, but the 60 per cent measurement is particularly important. It is widely used, not just here, but across developed nations. However, as Kezia Dugdale and Malcolm Chisholm pointed out, the Treasury documents that accompanied the autumn statement suggest a move away from the relative approach. That development was later disgracefully confirmed by the Prime Minister, who said:
“I think there is a real problem with the way we measure child poverty.”
There is not a real problem with the way we measure child poverty; the real problem is with the way the UK Government acts against child poverty.
The Prime Minister also said that measuring relative child poverty was “illogical”. This is an immensely serious point, on which I share Malcolm Chisholm’s anger—it was a flash of anger that we needed to hear in this debate. What is taking place is an attack on those who can least afford it.
I agree with Anne McTaggart that women are among those who will be most severely affected. There has been some progress in Scotland in attending to that issue. For example, we have ensured that employment rates for women have improved—that has happened in Scotland—but the measures that we are seeing in the autumn statement and in the UK Government’s general approach are very regressive indeed. We need to make sure that they do not take place.
Is it not the case that unemployment among women is growing, second only to unemployment among young people? If the cabinet secretary is taking measures to fight that, they are obviously failing.
That is a graphic illustration of the problem. I tried as gently as possible to say that there is a real problem with the UK Government’s approach. The member does not think that the Scottish Government is perfect. I accept that: I do not think that Scottish Government is perfect.
Members: Aha!
It is nearly perfect, but not perfect.
We could make common cause to oppose things that are bad for Scotland, but the automatic instinct of Rhoda Grant and of a number of Labour members is simply to attack the SNP. The more they do that in the way that they have done it, the more the case against the Tories is weakened.
Will the minister give way?
No, no: I am coming to Mr Rennie. I have a particular paragraph reserved for him, and I do not want him to spoil it.
The reality is that female labour market outcomes in Scotland improved over the latest quarter and over the year. There are now 39,000 more women in employment than there were at the start of 2010, and the female employment rate in Scotland is the highest of any UK nation. It is not perfect; we have lots more to do. However, the damage that will come from the UK Government is great. Let us say that. Let us not attack the Scottish Government; let us attack those who are the problem.
I will move on to two other issues. I was very impressed by the warmth that Mary Scanlon showed to my friend Mr Swinney; I was touched by it. However, I have to interrupt this a little to say that when she accused SNP back benchers of being out of touch—
Some SNP back benchers.
Mary Scanlon accused some SNP back benchers of being out of touch with Mr Swinney’s positive nature. However, she was not paying close enough attention to her friend, because he said in a statement on, I think, 29 November that the UK Government was doing too little, too late. That is exactly what each of the SNP back benchers said, and they said that because it is the truth: too little, too late. [Interruption.]
Mr Brownlee is drawing attention to himself, and I will draw attention to him, too.
Members: Mr Brown.
Mr Brown—he is now lodged in my mind. He and Mr Fraser absolutely insisted that slower economic growth is due to events in the euro zone. If Mr Brown turns to the autumn statement document that is in front of him and looks at table 1.1, he will discover that it confirms that the UK Government will act as a drag on growth in each year from 2012 to 2016. The figures are: -0.3 per cent in 2012; -0.5 per cent in 2013; -0.5 per cent in 2014; -0.7 per cent in 2015; and -0.7 per cent in 2016. For the uninitiated—including me, as I am not an economist—that means that GDP growth will be lower in each year as a result of the UK Government’s actions. To blame the euro zone is, to say the least, disingenuous.
I am shocked to learn that Michael Russell is not an economist. In fact, it was OBR that gave an explanation for the downgrades in growth. The economy is growing less strongly this year primarily because
“higher than expected inflation has squeezed household incomes and consumer spending.”
Those are not our words; they are the OBR’s words.
No one denies the validity of table 1.1 of the autumn statement document, which shows that the drag on growth is the UK Government.
I have a really important point to make about ordinary families. Mary Scanlon said, quite fairly, that people in Scotland will benefit from higher income tax personal allowances, but let us not forget that they will suffer from reductions in child tax credits, working tax credits, housing benefit and child benefit, all of which will reduce household income. There can be no doubt at all that the effect of the autumn statement will be damage to families in Scotland.
I do not believe that there is doubt about that in Scotland. I think that the vast majority of Scots, whether they are Labour, SNP or whatever, know that the reductions are damaging. I do not think that the role of any member in this chamber is to act as an apologist for that. However, it is not just that they should not act as an apologist.
As many members will know, Mr Rennie was once the Kelty coal-carrying champion, so he is used to taking on heavy burdens.
Will the cabinet secretary give way?
In a moment—I just want to say this.
The task of Sisyphus—rolling heavy things up hills—is what Mr Rennie enjoys, and justifying the unjustifiable is a really heavy thing. Rather than being an apologist for the UK Government, Mr Rennie should apologise to the Scottish people, including my constituents, who have seen through the Liberal Democrats. In the election in May, Argyll and Bute was the number one target seat for the Liberal Democrats, who went around telling people how much they were defending the Scottish people. However, I am pleased to say that in that number one target seat they came fourth. I predict that in future, if Mr Rennie insists on justifying the unjustifiable, that will seem a good result .
The only apology that should be made in the chamber this afternoon should come from the Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning to our colleges for the cut that he is proposing to make to young people’s training opportunities.
I rather thought that if I opened up that trap, Mr Rennie would fall into it, so I will conclude on the issue of colleges.
I have consistently made it plain in the chamber that colleges have a central role in supporting our ambitions, but we have to change and reform. The Thatcherite reforms of 20 years ago, which are now defended to the hilt by Mr Rennie—the new Thatcherite—do not leave Scottish colleges fit for purpose. I have talked to college chairs and principals extensively over the past few months. By and large, the college sector supports the ambition for a reformed system. There is a healthy debate under way about institutional mergers, with active discussion taking place across the country. I am working hard with the colleges to ensure that that service is targeted sharply on what young people and Scotland need: greater opportunity, which means jobs. That is an imperative. Those who do not wish to reform are simply unable to see that we can always do better.
I always listen carefully to arguments for change, and I have been impressed by the argument that we should invest in the process of change. I am glad that my colleagues agree with it, too. Now we have a proposal—a good proposal—for a transformation fund, which will go a long way to help. It is new money for the sector that will take the process forward and ensure that we have a college sector that is ready for the 21st century.
Rubbish.
Mr Findlay—I recognise his voice—shouts “Rubbish”. The reality of the situation is that, when there is pressure from the UK Government—indeed, when there was pressure from its predecessor, which wanted to cut further than Thatcher—this Government ensures that we go on delivering as best we can. That means reform.
This has been a positive debate, for the most part. I hope that it will end positively with support for the motion in the name of Mr Swinney.