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Chamber and committees

Official Report: search what was said in Parliament

The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.  

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Dates of parliamentary sessions
  1. Session 1: 12 May 1999 to 31 March 2003
  2. Session 2: 7 May 2003 to 2 April 2007
  3. Session 3: 9 May 2007 to 22 March 2011
  4. Session 4: 11 May 2011 to 23 March 2016
  5. Session 5: 12 May 2016 to 4 May 2021
  6. Current session: 13 May 2021 to 1 April 2026
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Displaying 2160 contributions

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Finance and Public Administration Committee [Draft]

Budget Scrutiny 2026-27

Meeting date: 20 January 2026

Michael Marra

Professor Heald, you said to the convener that a new Government, or this Government even, should stick to the current spending plans across the year. There has been significant commentary from your colleague Professor Spowage at the Fraser of Allander Institute and from the Institute for Fiscal Studies, saying that we could anticipate that there might have to be an in-year adjustment or another Scottish fiscal event within the year. We have become quite used to those, as there have been three in the past four years, and my understanding is that there was an internal one last year, rather than a public statement. That is partly because of the issues of managing the pressures that you have been exploring. Given the headwinds that the Government faces, is it a significant risk that, in essence, it is relying on something coming up within the year?

Finance and Public Administration Committee [Draft]

Budget Scrutiny 2026-27

Meeting date: 20 January 2026

Michael Marra

Professor Bell, the Institute for Fiscal Studies has said that the current spending plan might not get to the autumn. Do you share that concern?

Finance and Public Administration Committee [Draft]

Budget Scrutiny 2026-27

Meeting date: 20 January 2026

Michael Marra

We have touched on the spending review a few times. Professor Spowage said earlier that the timing of UK Government’s spending review was not under the control of the Scottish Government, which might have concerns about that. The spending review was published on 11 June last year, and it took the UK Government 14 months to prepare it. Was there any reason why a spending review could not have been undertaken in Scotland prior to the publication of the UK spending review, at least in terms of methodology and taking a zero-based approach? Yes, we have the global figures and the UK’s conclusions about what was allocated, but building a methodology from the ground up in order to look at where we are getting value for our budget and what we are looking at could have been done at that point, could it not?

Finance and Public Administration Committee [Draft]

Budget Scrutiny 2026-27

Meeting date: 20 January 2026

Michael Marra

Is what we have ended up with in the Scottish spending review a satisfactory document that allows organisations throughout Scotland to have sight of what they have to do?

Finance and Public Administration Committee [Draft]

Budget Scrutiny 2026-27

Meeting date: 20 January 2026

Michael Marra

In essence, we think that most of that money will probably be generated in Edinburgh and a bit in the surrounding areas, but that the money will not be kept by Edinburgh. It will go into the general pool and be distributed around the country.

Finance and Public Administration Committee [Draft]

Budget Scrutiny 2026-27

Meeting date: 20 January 2026

Michael Marra

There are a few points of clarity that you can perhaps help me with. Will the benefit or uplift from the changes to council tax—commonly referred to as a “mansion tax”—accrue to local authorities, or will it be banked centrally?

Finance and Public Administration Committee [Draft]

Budget Scrutiny 2026-27

Meeting date: 20 January 2026

Michael Marra

On 22 December, you accepted a last-minute policy proposal. What was that in relation to?

Finance and Public Administration Committee [Draft]

Budget Scrutiny 2026-27

Meeting date: 20 January 2026

Michael Marra

Clearly, it is legally appropriate, and the Government can make those decisions as it wants, but it will be concerning to members of the committee that we are seeing predictions from independent analysts that the budget is running close to the rails, and that the Government is having to allocate one-off savings and one-off pots of money to try to get through the process. That has to be a concern. I am surprised that you do not share that concern.

Finance and Public Administration Committee [Draft]

Budget Scrutiny 2026-27

Meeting date: 20 January 2026

Michael Marra

Can you tell us how a member of the public would see the relationship between the efficiency savings and the resource gap? We have heard your repeated warnings about the size of the resource gap and the amount of money that has been set out. In essence, is that a curtailment of resource demand that is aimed at closing the gap?

Finance and Public Administration Committee [Draft]

Budget Scrutiny 2026-27

Meeting date: 20 January 2026

Michael Marra

For 2023-24, we know that the claim is definitely false, because we have the outturn data—do we not?