The Scottish Government must tell Scots what capital projects will be scrapped as a result of a black hole in the budget, a think tank has urged.
The Fraser of Allander Institute (FAI) found a £1bn deficit in the funding available for infrastructure projects – even when the Scottish Government reaches the limits of its narrow borrowing powers – ahead of the publication of the infrastructure pipeline.
According to the FAI, £8.1bn in projects was laid out in June of last year, but only £7.1bn will be available, meaning cuts will be necessary.
A raft of national treatment centres as well as the dualling of the A9 and A96 are among the capital projects yet to be completed.
The Government is also wrestling with a multi-billion pound black hole in capital funding by the end of the decade.
But despite issues in capital funding, Rachel Reeves’s budget in November did improve the picture on day-to-day spending, boosting the Scottish Government’s coffers by about £750m.
Dr Joao Sousa, the deputy director of the FAI, said: “The Scottish Government’s job has been made easier on the resource side this year, mostly due to Barnett consequentials and some unexpected additional funding.
“But this boost masks the fact it will still be in underlying deficit, which means this approach cannot be relied on indefinitely.
“There is no such news on capital, and there something will have to give.
“We hope the long-awaited infrastructure investment plan will explain to the public how projects have been prioritised – and crucially, which ones will no longer be going ahead and why.”
The think tank’s report, released on Thursday, also suggested the Scottish Government would have to consider sizable tax hikes or spending cuts if the UK Government was to work to improve fiscal sustainability.
To get back into the black, Westminster would only be required to stem the growth in health spending modestly and slightly increase tax, but the impact of such a move on the Scottish outlook, the report said, would be “quite severe”.
According to the think tank, a 1.8% drop in health spending and an increase of 3p in income tax in the rest of the UK could lead to a funding gap of about 17%.
Filling that gap using income tax alone would require 9p in the pound to be added to each band, taking the lowest rate in Scotland to 28% and the highest to 57% – before any behavioural changes are taken into account.
FAI director Mairi Spowage said: “Because so much of the funding for the Scottish Government over the long run comes from health consequentials, the UK Government bearing down on health spending growth would leave the Scottish Government short of good options to close its funding gap.
“The already large gap currently projected by Shona Robison by 2029-30 is clearly unsustainable, and makes the challenge even more daunting.
“The tax rises required to plug the gap seem undeliverable, largely due to Scotland having fewer very high earners, and it’s hard to see how the Scottish Government could respond without having to cut spending.”
Scottish Tory finance spokesman Craig Hoy said the report was a “damning indictment” of the Scottish Government.
“It beggars belief that there’s a £1bn shortfall in the spending plans Shona Robison announced just six months ago, on top of the existing £1.3bn gap in her welfare spending plans,” he said.
“If John Swinney were serious about tackling this huge black hole, he would abandon his failed left-wing agenda and instead adopt the Scottish Conservatives’ plans for lower taxes and reduced welfare spending.
“But hard-pressed Scots workers will fear that, once again, they will be made to pick up the tab for SNP mismanagement.”
The Scottish Government has been contacted for comment.
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