Holyrood block grant to be cut as a result of Reeves’s welfare changes – Robison
The Scottish Finance Secretary addressed MSPs after the Chancellor’s spring statement on Wednesday.

The Scottish Government is facing cuts in the cash it receives from Westminster as a result of Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s decision to reduce welfare spending, MSPs have been told.
Holyrood Finance Secretary Shona Robison said she has received confirmation from the Treasury that “there will be cuts to our block grant from the welfare cuts from 2026-27 onwards”.
Her comments came shortly after Ms Reeves used her spring statement in the Commons to confirm a further squeeze in the welfare budget, building on cuts to the disability and incapacity bill set out earlier this month, with the package now expected to save £4.8 billion rather than the more than £5 billion in 2029-30 hoped for by ministers.
She condemned the UK Government for its “repeated attacks on some of the most vulnerable members of society”, warning there is a risk of “creating a vicious cycle of reduced funding and increased demand” for welfare.
She hit out at the Chancellor, condemning her “austerity cuts” and claiming: “The UK Government appears to be trying to balance its books on the backs of disabled people.”
Ms Robison welcomed the £2.2 billion increase in defence spending confirmed by the Chancellor, but said UK Government choices to “short-change public services and deliver austerity cuts to some of the most vulnerable are deplorable”.

“The Westminster Government must invest in social security support – not cut it – or risk being remembered as the Labour administration under whose watch child poverty continued to rise.”
Roz Foyer, general secretary of the Scottish Trades Union Congress, claimed the Chancellor had “rushed through deeply damaging cuts to support for disabled people”.
She added: “No-one denies that this statement was made in the midst of testing domestic and international circumstances.
“However, the Chancellor had choices. She could have rewritten her self-imposed and self-defeating fiscal rules. She could have increased taxes on corporations or the wealthy.
“Putting fiscal rules above human dignity is not progressive nor economically astute. It is deeply damaging and risks repeating the austerity doom loop of her predecessors.”
However Scottish ministers face “significant reductions” in future years, he added.
In his initial reaction to the spring statement, Mr Sousa said: “The current forecast points to the Pip (personal independence payment) reforms reducing the block grant adjustment for social security devolution by increasing amounts, from £177 million in 2027-28 to £455 million in 2029-30.
“Put together, and in the absence of any other changes, the Scottish budget would be around £900 million worse off on the current side in 2029-30 than previously projected.
“On the other hand, some additional capital spending on areas which are devolved in Scotland – so aside from the defence spending increases – are expected to raise the Scottish Government’s capital budget by nearly £250 million by 2029-30 relative to current plans.”

He said: “This is a huge boost for Scotland’s world-leading defence sector, which delivers Scottish economic growth and more highly-skilled jobs.
“The increase will also mean better homes for our military personnel and families, including the thousands based in Scotland.
“The spring statement also delivered an extra £28 million for the Scottish Government.
“That is on top of their £4.9 billion extra from the budget, creating a record £47.7 billion settlement for 25/26, announced at the autumn Budget.
“This is the biggest budget settlement in the history of devolution and an end to austerity. The Scottish Government must now use that wisely – to improve Scotland’s failing public services.”