Members of the Scottish Government's Council of Economic Advisers will be quizzed by MSPs following their first meeting last month.
Council chairman Crawford Beveridge, a former chief executive of Scottish Enterprise, and Professor Andrew Hughes Hallett, an economist, will answer questions from Holyrood's Economy Committee.
The council consists of academics, economists and entrepreneurs and was established in 2007 to give economic advice to ministers.
It was relaunched by the First Minister in November 2011, with new members given a specific agenda to look at jobs, economic recovery, internationalisation and "economic levers".
The new membership, which also features includes businessman Jim McColl and Nobel Prize-winning economist Professor Joseph Stiglitz among others, met for the first time on January 24. The council will meet again in Aberdeen this month.
The council was the subject of debate at Holyrood at the end of last year when Conservative leader Ruth Davidson asked the First Minister to explain why it had not met since September 2010.
She described the group as "our best chance in several generations to tackle the problem of systemic economic mediocrity".
Alex Salmond said the appointment of the council's new membership took place in November 2011, being delayed by the Scottish elections.
In this section
-
Alex Salmond launches campaign for a 'Yes' vote on Scottish independence
- New poll shows a majority of Scots opposes independence from UK
- Scotland becomes first European nation to set minimum alcohol unit price
- Scottish Government warns coalition pay plans will hit Scots workers
-
Alex Salmond rejects call for an inquiry into Lockerbie bomber conviction
- Inquiry seeks answers to the problem of Scotland's ageing population
- MSPs vote to 'soften blow' of controversial Westminster welfare reforms
- Businesses urged to pool resources in bid to increase apprentice numbers
- Open letter slams Lockerbie bomber's conviction as 'perverse judgment'
- Government awards £350m contracts for new Trident submarines at Faslane



Want to leave a comment? Please sign in.