The Scottish Secretary has responded to the 2019-20 Government
Expenditure and Revenue Scotland figures. Commenting on the
Scottish Government GERS figures, Alister Jack said: The Scottish
Government’s own figures show clearly how much Scotland benefits
from being part of a strong United Kingdom, with the pooling
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The Scottish Secretary has responded to the 2019-20
Government Expenditure and Revenue Scotland figures.
Commenting on the Scottish
Government GERS figures, said:
The Scottish Government’s own figures show clearly
how much Scotland benefits from being part of a
strong United Kingdom, with the pooling and sharing
of resources that brings. People in Scotland, year
after year, benefit from levels of public spending
substantially above the United Kingdom average, with
a Union dividend of £1,941 per person in Scotland.
That has never been more important than it is right
now. In the face of a global pandemic, the strength
and experience of the UK Treasury is helping people
in Scotland and across the rest of the United
Kingdom.
The UK Government is currently supporting more than
930,000 jobs in Scotland – a third of the workforce.
This is just one part of a huge package of measures
to get our economy back on track, on top of an extra
£6.5 billion for the Scottish Government to fund
public services in Scotland. We will continue to back
all parts of the UK as we recover from the economic
impact of coronavirus.
Background
-
The figures from the Scottish Government show
Scotland’s notional deficit rose from £13.1 billion
in 2018-19 to £15.1 billion in 2019-20. This is
more than Scotland’s entire health budget for the
year, which was £13.8 billion in 2019-20.
-
The ‘Union dividend’ per person in Scotland (the
combined value of higher spending and lower
revenue) was £1,941 in 2019-20. This was an
increase from £1,805 in 2018-19
-
Public expenditure per person in Scotland in
2019-20 was £1,633 higher than the UK average.
-
Revenue per person in Scotland remained below the
UK average. In 2019-20, including an illustrative
geographical share of North Sea revenue, revenue
per person was £308 lower than the UK average. This
was a substantial change from 2018-19 when revenue
per head was £171 lower than the UK average.
-
Total expenditure for the benefit of Scotland
increased from £78,598 million in 2018-19, to
£81,015 million in 2019-20.
-
As a percentage of Scotland’s GDP the notional
deficit increased from -7.4% in 2018-19 to -8.6% in
2019-20. For comparison the UK’s deficit rose from
-1.9% of GDP to -2.5% over the same period. New
members of the EU are required to have a deficit
less than 3% of GDP. The OECD reports that in 2019
the other EU countries with the highest deficits
were France (-3%), Spain (-2.8%) and Hungary (-2%).
-
Non-North Sea revenue in Scotland grew by 1.7% in
2019-20, while Non-North Sea revenue growth in the
UK as a whole was 1.9%.
-
Income tax receipts in Scotland grew 1.5% from
2018-19 to 2019-20, the same as across the UK.
-
Including a geographic share of North Sea revenue
Scotland’s total revenue in 2019-20 was £65,878
million, up slightly from £65,442 million in
2018-19. For 2019-20 this represented 8% of all UK
revenues, slightly down from 8.1% in 2018-19.
-
This change reflects the fact that Scottish North
Sea revenue fell by £642 million in 2019-20, due in
part to the fall in oil prices toward the end of
the year.
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