Barnett formula

The Barnett formula

Author or Creator
J. R. Cuthbert
The Barnet formula is used to calculate how much money Scotland receives each year from the UK Treasury. It calculates devolved budgets.   It uses the previous year’s budget and adjusts based on increases or decreases in comparable spending per person in England.  Parts of the resulting sum are with held for non-devolved expenditure.  Other areas of government have only a portion of their expenditure allocated by the formula.

Scotland the Brief

Primary Author or Creator
Gordon MacIntyre-Kemp
Alternative Published Date
2020
Fast Facts

All you need to know about Scotland's economy, its finances, independence and Brexit.

Ambiguous no more: Time to de-mystify the Barnett Formula

Primary Author or Creator
J. R. Cuthbert
Alternative Published Date
2020
Fast Facts

The overall effect of the new Barnett funding system is to place Scotland in a vulnerable position, where it is at much greater risk of falling into a cycle of economic decline relative to the rest of the UK.

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The Barnett Formula

Primary Author or Creator
Matthew Keep
Date Published
Fast Facts

The Barnett formula calculates the annual change in the block grant. The formula doesn’t determine the total size of the block grant just the yearly change. For devolved services, the Barnett formula aims to give each country the same pounds-per-person change in funding.

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HS2 will not cost Scotland £17 billion

Primary Author or Creator
Full Fact
Date Published
Fast Facts

There is no evidence for the claim that HS2 will cost Scotland. In effect, all money spent by Scotland on HS2 is returned through the Barnett formula.

Revealed: The ACCOUNTING TRICK that Hides Scotland’s Wealth (2020)

Primary Author or Creator
Gordon MacIntyre-Kemp
Alternative Published Date
2020
Fast Facts

The UK Government has diverted Scotland’s wealth to the UK Treasury to pay off its debts.  Thus it creates 100% of Scotland’s supposed debts and 100% of its phoney deficit. This is the impact of Westminster’s debt loading alone, and upon that accounting trick, rests the entire economic case for t

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