Guernsey Press

Jack urges Scottish Government to use cash ‘wisely’ and not raise income tax

But Scottish Finance Secretary Shona Robison said the autumn statement had not provided the funding devolved governments need.

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Holyrood ministers have been urged to spend their cash “more wisely” amid speculation the Scottish Government could be about to up income tax for higher earners north of the border.

Deputy First Minister and Scottish Finance Secretary Shona Robison will confirm any tax changes when she unveils the Scottish Budget for next year on December 19.

Public sector spending will be “extremely difficult indeed” as a result of Chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s autumn statement on Wednesday, she warned.

Ms Robison accused Mr Hunt of failing “to provide the funding that devolved governments need”.

Shona Robison said the Chancellor had failed to provide the funding needed by devolved administrations (Jane Barlow/PA)

The UK Government insisted Scotland will receive £545 million in Barnett consequentials – cash which is due to the devolved administrations as a result of funding decisions taken south of the border – over the course of 2023-24 and 2024-25.

Scottish Secretary Alister Jack challenged the Scottish Government to use this “wisely” and not put up taxes in next month’s Budget.

He said: “They should not be, in my view, raising taxes. I think they should be spending the money they have more wisely.”

Alister Jack
Scottish Secretary Alister Jack said the autumn statement was good news for Scotland (PA)

He added: “I think making Scotland the highest taxed part of the United Kingdom is a mistake and we have seen over the last four or five years the growth rates in Scotland have been slower than the growth rates across the UK.”

Mr Jack said UK Government decisions, coupled with an increase in the minimum wage to £11.44 an hour, would “mean a pay boost for millions of workers right across Scotland”.

Mr Hunt confirmed the state pension is to rise by 8.5% from next April, and the Scottish Secretary said “pensioners will get a £900 a year increase”.

Mr Jack insisted: “This is an autumn statement to support hard-working families and grow our country’s economy. It is great news for Scotland.”

“We have seen no such thing from the autumn statement today, and what has emerged is a set of choices that will have a devastating impact on our public services next year.

“This autumn statement simply does not go far enough in delivering the funding that we need.

“This makes the challenges on our budget even more severe.”

Roz Foyer, general secretary of the Scottish Trades Union Congress, accused the Chancellor or using cuts to key public services to “bankroll some desperate pre-election giveaways”.

She added: “With workers living through the largest reduction in real living standards on record, and with average mortgage payments alone increasing by £2,600, the Chancellor is frankly deluded if he thinks a £450 cut in national insurance will touch the sides.

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(PA Graphics)

John Dickie, director of the Child Poverty Action Group in Scotland, said: “The national insurance cut will increase take-home pay for some, but not for those whose income is already too low to benefit from it, nor for those on low incomes for whom it simply reduces entitlement to universal credit.”

The drinks industry, however, welcomed the freeze in alcohol duty announced by the Chancellor.

Mark Kent, chief executive of the Scotch Whisky Association, said it is “raising a dram to the Chancellor’s decision”.

He added: “With cost pressures hurting distillers large and small, the Treasury has provided some much-needed certainty and stability for the year ahead that will allow us to get back to doing what we do best – making a world-class spirit, with a global reputation, which creates jobs and boosts growth here at home.”

Age Scotland also welcomed the autumn statement, with chief executive Katherine Crawford describing the rise in the state pension as “much-needed good news” for many older Scots.

She said she hopes it will “go some way towards helping older people maintain an acceptable standard of living in later life”.

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