There have been some heavyweight salvos this week in the constitutional
debate. From the YES corner we have Crawford Beveridge and his team drawn from the First Minister’s Council of Economic Advisers. This is without
doubt a weighty contribution, full of decent analysis; if not a lot of
repetition in case we missed the key messages!
The first report of the Fiscal Commission Working
Group sets out a macroeconomic framework
centred on three pillars:
·
Monetary Policy – including the
choice of currency and the framework for setting interest rates and the money
supply to promote (‘price’) stability and minimise short-term volatility;
·
Financial Stability – including the
use of prudential regulation, supervision and resolution tools to ensure
stability in the financial system; and,
·
Fiscal Policy – including the
setting of taxes, government spending and borrowing within an overarching
framework of fiscal sustainability.
A key message is that under independence Scotland would control the
levers that would give the country the flexibility to respond to the prevailing
economic conditions. A positive example of this is immigration policy, although
the implications for border controls are not explored in this paper.
This report sets out a very similar monetary
approach to that outlined by John Swinney by keeping the pound within a
Sterling zone and UK co-ordination of financial supervision. This includes “separating the
link between the balance sheet of financial institutions and government”. The
lessons from the “arc of prosperity” have clearly been learnt!
The fiscal recommendations are also similar,
although it says more about the public spending implications of fiscal policy.
It describes a fiscally conservative approach in the early years of
independence in order to establish Scotland’s credibility as an independent
nation. This very much reminds me of Gordon Brown’s approach as UK Chancellor
in 1997.
The report recommends that, “in addition to
boosting economic growth, the Government should explore and prioritise
opportunities to address inequalities and to promote intergenerational equity
and environmental sustainability”. That’s a fine objective, but the report goes
on to link fiscal policy to the UK through a, “fiscal sustainability agreement
with overall objectives for ensuring that net debt and government borrowing do
not diverge significantly.”
On public spending the report recognises that
the balance of Scotland’s relative fiscal strength depends heavily on revenue
from the North Sea. Estimates of this revenue vary widely and are subject to
worldwide price volatility. The Fiscal Commission recommends establishing a
stabilisation fund from oil revenues that exceed current budget requirements to
smooth out and future financial shocks. While this is a prudent measure as part
of their fiscal framework it does limit the ability of the Scottish Government
to tackle structural inequality. In fact the framework they propose would
significantly constrain the ability of the Scottish Government to adopt an
alternative economic strategy such as A
Better Way advocated by the STUC. In essence it foresees a fiscally
conservative approach that places market credibility above other
considerations.
The Fiscal Commission’s approach to monetary
policy has the same shortcomings I highlighted in last Red Paper publication. There
has to be a huge question mark over the willingness of the rest of the UK (rUK)
to enter into their proposed Sterling zone and to share governance of the Bank
of England in the way the Fiscal Commission suggests. Even if that was possible
Scotland would at best be a junior partner with a minority say over a key lever
of economic policy. Handing over monetary policy to rUK also limits the scope
of fiscal policy. We only have to look at the Eurozone crisis debate to see the
link between monetary and fiscal policy. If the key economic levers are
controlled by another country, then there is less influence on monetary, and
fiscal, policy than under devolution.
The Fiscal Commission’s much vaunted
flexibility under independence is looking more like a straightjacket for a
future Scottish Government. It may help to make independence sound less
threatening to the financial markets, but there is little for those who argue
that an independent Scotland should be a radical beacon of change.
Cross posted at the Red Paper and there will be an opportunity to discuss these issues
on Saturday at the Red Paper seminar. You can register here.
No comments:
Post a Comment