Public finance
The Barnett formula
The Accounting Trick that Hides Scotland’s Wealth
Scotland the Brief
All you need to know about Scotland's economy, its finances, independence and Brexit.
Nationalism and the politics of austerity: comparing Catalonia, Scotland, and Québec
This analysis of the impact of austerity on nationalism stresses the role of blame as it interacts with political institutions and fiscal pressures.
Brexit has reinvigorated Scottish nationalism
Scottish independence is a constitutional project, not an economic one. Fixing who governs you takes precedence over an easy life for supermarkets or civil servants.
The Politics of Scotland’s Public Finances
The early operation of the 2016 Scottish Fiscal Framework and the divergence of UK and Scottish income tax rates highlights the practical issues of devolved tax policy in the context of UK fiscal centralization.
Ambiguous no more: Time to de-mystify the Barnett Formula
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.
The Barnett Formula
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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