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Scotland's finance secretary unveils another £615m of spending cuts | scotland

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Scotland’s finance secretary has announced a further £615m of cuts to health care, education and the justice system, blaming the “calamity” of Liz Truss’s mini-budget.

John Swinney said he expected further deep spending cuts from the UK chancellor’s autumn statement, with a consequent reduction in Scottish funding.

Describing the combination of Brexit, Covid recovery and the energy crisis resulting from the war in Ukraine as “unprecedented”, Swinney told MSPs on Wednesday that he had never known a time of greater pressure on the public finances.

Announcing savings across a range of departments, as well as committing to cost of living support and public sector pay deals, he brought total cuts – when added to previously announced cuts of £560m – to a total of almost £1.2bn.

The deputy first minister said he had intended to present his long-awaited emergency budget review last week, but paused the announcement for Jeremy Hunt’s 31 October fiscal statement, which was then postponed until 17 November.

He told MSPs he had concluded he could wait no longer: “The scale of the challenge is so severe, and the impacts and uncertainties for people, households and businesses so significant that the imperative consideration must be to provide as much stability, certainty and transparency you can.”

Reminding the Holyrood chamber that inflation meant the Scottish government’s annual budget is worth £1.7bn less than when it was published last December, he added that the scrapping of the plan to cut the basic rate of income tax in the rest of the UK would reduce block grant funding by £230m.

Swinney set out a range of savings, including:

  • £116m from Covid budgets, including vaccines, test and protect and PPE.

  • £21.2m from the justice and veterans budget.

  • £38m from the mental health budget – although Swinney insisted this referred to reducing budget growth, not a longer-term cut.

  • £2.9m from education, including reducing grants for international higher education and cuts to marketing expenditure.

  • £150m in capital infrastructure funding.

Swinney said he had also committed over £700m of additional resources to fund public sector pay settlements, and announced about £35m for cost of living support, including doubling the Scottish child bridging payment to £260, doubling the fuel insecurity fund and a new £ 1.4m island cost crisis emergency fund to help island households manage higher energy costs.

The statement immediately drew criticism from the Scottish Conservative finance spokesperson, Liz Smith, who questioned why there had been no further cut to the constitution budget: “The obvious conclusion to be drawn is that he and his colleagues … prefer a divisive referendum to practical support measurements.”

https://bigger.ga/scotlands-finance-secretary-unveils-another-615m-of-spending-cuts-scotland/

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