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Thursday, April 25, 2024

Autumn Statement: Jeremy Hunt says finance plans worth £1.5bn to Scotland

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt leaves Downing Street in central London on his way to make a full budget statement in the House of CommonsGetty Images

Financial plans set out in the autumn statement are worth £1.5bn to Scotland, the chancellor has said.

Jeremy Hunt said the Scottish government would receive the funds over the next two years.

However First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said Scotland essentially had a flat budget because its value had shrunk by £1.7bn as a result of inflation.

It comes as the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) predicts the UK economy will fall by 1.4% next year.

The independent forecaster said higher energy prices driven by the war in Ukraine are largely to blame for the downturn. It believes the country will not start growing again until 2024.

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  • Why Hunt’s plan is not the full story for Scotland

The chancellor said his plan was designed to fight against inflation in the face of “unprecedented global pressures” brought about by the pandemic and the Ukraine crisis.

He announced a £55bn “plan for stability”, half of which would come from tax rises and the rest from deep spending cuts.

Mr Hunt said: “Scottish families will receive billions of pounds of UK government support, such as inflation-matching increases in benefits and the state pension.”

During a combative FMQs, Nicola Sturgeon accused the UK government of repeating the mistakes of the past by bringing in austerity.

Nicola Sturgeon

Scottish Parliament TV

“These plans are likely to worsen the extreme pressures already being faced as a result of inflation and rising interest rates,” she said.

“We have called for an alternative approach that avoids prolonging a recession that the Bank of England forecasts. I hope that alternative approach is listened to.

“Of course the UK is almost unique amongst wealthier countries in terms of reintroducing austerity.

“There is an alternative to Tory mismanagement of our economy, it’s self management of our economy, otherwise known as independence.”

‘Significant difficulties’

Other key announcements affecting people in Scotland included state pensions and benefits rising in line with inflation as well as a continued price cap on energy bills – although this cap will be raised.

Mr Hunt told the Commons that the chief secretary of the Treasury had met with Scotland’s deputy first minister John Swinney, adding “we have good co-operation”.

Mr Swinney said he welcomed certain measures but said there were “significant difficulties” underlying the budget.

He said: “The situation in the UK has been made discernibly worse and more challenging by the decisions of the UK government – first, in a prolonged period of austerity that they kicked off in 2010 which we are now returning to.

“Also because of that absolutely reckless mini budget just a few weeks ago when the Conservatives thought the right thing to do was dramatically reduce taxation – and we now find them dramatically increasing taxation just a few weeks later.”

John Swinney

Mr Swinney said the Scottish government would carefully consider the changes and set out its response in the December budget.

Liz Smith, Scottish Conservative finance spokesperson, said Mr Hunt had protected vulnerable people by uprating benefits in line with inflation, maintaining the pensions triple lock and increasing the national living wage.

She also welcomed the promise of a feasibility study on upgrading the A75 – on which she said the SNP had “dragged their feet”.

  • UK faces biggest fall in living standards on record

Ms Smith said: “The Chancellor has delivered what he promised – an honest, fully-costed and compassionate package to meet the tough economic challenges the country faces in the wake of the global cost-of-living crisis.”

Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Alex Cole-Hamilton accused the Conservatives of incompetence which led to tax rises and spending cuts.

And the Scottish Greens criticised the chancellor’s confirmation of plans for the Sizewell C nuclear plant in the south east of England – despite denying the plans were under review earlier this month.

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