The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.
All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
All Official Reports of public meetings of committees.
Displaying 3675 contributions
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 28 March 2023
John Mason
You have kind of underlined what I was thinking. So, 1.7 per cent would be the absolute minimum or the best situation—however you want to look at it—whereas, as you say, 10.1 per cent is where we are more likely to be.
What would 1.7 per cent mean for us? I think that you gave us a figure, but what would we have to raise income tax or cut expenditure by to get 1.7 per cent?
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 28 March 2023
John Mason
I will come back to you on that, but I will let Mr Black come in first.
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 28 March 2023
John Mason
I am sorry to interrupt you. Do you agree that, often, people give their views and then the Government, the committee or whoever says, “We have heard and considered your views, but we disagree with them”, yet people think that they have not been heard at all?
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 23 March 2023
John Mason
I take your point that there might be general public awareness of long Covid, but we continue to have problems in certain sectors of the community that are not engaged with health services anyway. Men in more deprived areas hardly ever engage unless there is something very seriously wrong, and vaccine uptake tends to be worse among some ethnic minorities and in poorer areas. What work are we doing—and what could we do—to engage with the people who have not been so engaged in the past?
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 23 March 2023
John Mason
There is a lot of misinformation, which the committee looked at previously, about vaccines and vaccine damage. I do not know whether you agree, but it is my view that it would help if we could get some simple figures out, such as the one that I still use a lot, which is that vaccines saved 20 million lives. I assume that the number has gone up, although I still use that figure. Simple messages like that might get through to people. Someone came into my office last Friday who was still very wary of the vaccines and needed some reassurance.
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 23 March 2023
John Mason
Yes—I think that we had evidence earlier that a lot of the people with long Covid had Covid before there was a vaccine available. Is that broadly the case?
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 23 March 2023
John Mason
Okay, thanks.
Comparisons with myalgic encephalomyelitis have come through in the inquiry. ME has been around for 40 years—or, at least, it has been recognised for that length of time. We all know sufferers of ME. We have never found a cure for or an answer to it, and it has been difficult to pin down. Is that where we are going with long Covid—that it will continue to be incredibly difficult to pin down and we will probably not get one simple solution?
COVID-19 Recovery Committee
Meeting date: 23 March 2023
John Mason
On the theme of educating people, we would expect that, in the health service, there would be a good understanding of long Covid, but a lot of other employers, such as those in the private sector, might not understand the condition and what they could and should do to support employees. Is any work going on, or can any work go on, for employers, such as small employers who do not know an awful lot about the topic?
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 14 March 2023
John Mason
Professor Cairney, your paper is full of contrasts or, some would say, paradoxes. Colleagues have mentioned a few, and I will mention a few more.
Under the heading “Fostering equity, fairness, or justice”, you talk about the focus
“on efficiency, using economic tools … to identify how to produce the highest benefits from the same costs”,
but you say that policy
“should also prioritise the fair distribution of costs and benefits.”
Is it not possible to be efficient and fair?
Finance and Public Administration Committee
Meeting date: 14 March 2023
John Mason
That touches on one of the other issues that I want to raise, which is mentioned later in your report. It concerns the idea of decentralisation, flexibility, collaborative working and all those sorts of things, as against setting a clear ambition for national accountability.
I suppose that I would feel that that is the case; you can either go too far one way or too far the other. If there is a clear, driving ambition from central Government, that means that local government and everyone else will get squashed. On the other hand, however, if you allow local government—or local health boards or local anything—to do whatever it wants, there is no coherence to that. I feel that, ultimately, that is impossible to square.