The Act also declares subsidy control (the successor of the EU state aid regime) as a reserved power, as it does on the successor to the EU Structural Funds (UK Shared Prosperity Fund). Notwithstanding the Devolution settlement in the Scotland Acts that does recognise in various ways and forms the free movement of goods and persons across the UK as a reserved power, there is limited explicit recognition in the Internal Market Act (and the subsequent Subsidy Control Bill as well as the prospectus documents over the replacement of EU funds) of the Devolved and local Government powers on these matters.