'Devo More' not 'Devo Max': The realistic possibilities Alan Trench Stevenson Lecture, University of Glasgow 11 November 2014.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Scotland and Wales: Responses to the Recession David Bell University of Stirling 1.
Advertisements

Fairness and accountability: new financial arrangements for Wales Gerald Holtham.
FINANCING DEVO MORE Alan Trench Edinburgh, 25 January 2013.
Introduction to Tax Policy Design and Development Richard M. Bird and Arindam Das-Gupta March 2004.
4.5 Government Economic Policy
Super ‘devo-max’ and moves towards a federal Britain Iain Mclean, Oxford University For LSE Workshop
Confronting the Challenges: A Partnership Approach Peter Shields and Kieran Molloy Co-chairs of Supported Employment Solutions (SES)
Scotland’s new devolved tax powers Alison Cumming Head of Tax Policy, Scottish Government CIPFA Scotland Conference, 26 March 2015.
Fiscal responsibility and fiscal fantasy Nuffield Alumni Seminar
Political strategies and a Scottish independence referendum Presentation by Alan Trench for Constitution Unit seminar, University College London, 12 March.
Devo more, devo plus and so on: extending devolution in the UK, and financing it Presentation by Alan Trench for PSA Territorial Politics Group conference,
Scotland in the United Kingdom: An enduring settlement.
A Scottish Fiscal Framework
HEALTH AND WEALTH – PRELIM REVISION Critically examine the success of recent government policies to reduce poverty.
Lesson Starter List the five different types of Bills. Choose one and give examples of legislation passed. Why have different types of bills? What is.
1 Fiscal Federalism in Iraq: OIL and GAS. The oil situation: a snapshot.
National Delivery Group Welfare Reform: Challenges for Employability Partnerships Andrew Noble Improvement Service Tuesday 18 th June 2013 Atlantic Quay.
London Finance Commission Tony Travers LSE. Context Tax raised by State/provincial + local government in major democracies as % of GDP: Canada15.3 France.
What is multi-level governance? Sovereign? The Prime Minister The House of Commons Parliament The Judiciary The UK population The Scottish Parliament The.
Social Programs and Taxation
The Agenda and Timetable for a UK Constitutional Convention Professor Robert Hazell Constitution Unit School of Public Policy University College London.
THE UNITED KINGDOM SIZE:245,000 sq. km (About the size of California) POPULATION:61 million GDP per capita: $31,800 ETHNIC:92% White, 8% Other 83% English.
Confidential The Budget Presentation to the JCC By Eddie Teare MHK, Treasury Minister 18 February 2015.
Tackling Poverty. You need to know about what is happening to tackle poverty. This is the responsibility of: 1.Central Government (London) 2.The Scottish.
Devolution in Scotland & Wales Crashing toward constitutional change?
WEEK 8 – IS THE UNITED KINGDOM BREAKING UP?. 2 THE CASE FOR DEVOLUTION … “The United Kingdom is a partnership enriched by distinct national identities.
CHARTER 88 Unlocking democracy. HISTORY Formed in 1988 Started as a publication in the Guardian and New Statesman Charter 88 calls for greater democracy,
THE FUTURE OF SCOTLAND. POTENTIAL EXAM QUESTION  Explain, in detail, why some people believe that devolution is the best way to make decisions in Scotland.
Devolution / Independence Devolution “The settled will of the people” John Smith Labour Leader Was meant to be a block on nationalist ambitions but it.
Social Security for Scotland: Benefits being devolved to the Scottish Parliament Updated August 2015.
The UK Constitutional Arrangement Starter Task 1.Who is the head of state of the United Kingdom? 2.According to British law, one group of people are never.
Advanced Democracies Defining Paths Freedom and equality
American Free Enterprise. The Benefits of Free Enterprise.
British Government and Politics (JN302) Devolution.
BRITAIN How Government Works
Fiscal Policy. Influencing the level of economic activity though manipulation of government income and expenditure Associated with Keynesian Demand Management.
Government Revenue Economics 120. There is a saying that only two things in life are certain: death and taxes.
Concepts of Fiscal policy. 2 of 38 Fiscal policy Fiscal policy refers to the policy of the government regarding Taxation (Revenue collection through taxes)
Scotland within the UK and EU: the work and welfare issue.
You can do this! Don’t be afraid of Economics… Bruce Damasio Maryland Council for Economic Education.
Social Programs and Taxation. What is a Social Program?? - services provided by the government to reduce economic inequalities and promote the well-being.
The Calman Commission Commission on Scottish Devolution.
Introducing a Property Tax The Northern Ireland Experience A personal view Brian McClure, Department of Finance and Personnel 9/10 March 2010.
Moray CPB Budget and Prevention Calum Elliot March 2013.
Difficult Democracy in Scotland Questions. Int – Explain, in detail, why some people believe that devolution is the best way to make decisions.
 Chapter 16 Government Spending. Growth of Government In 1929 only 3 million governme nt workers at all levels Depression causes greater demand for government.
Devolution finance under the Tories Presentation for IWA/WGC Conference on ‘Life under the Tories’ Cardiff, 3 December 2009 Alan Trench (University of.
What’s the link to Macro Ec?. Quick MC practice … you have 5 mins to complete these ….
Chapter 9 Government’s Role in the Economy. What should the govt. provide? What are the characteristics of a free market? What are the characteristics.
WHAT IS PUBLIC POLICY? Social and Economic Policy.
Taxation – focus on the UK Key issues to consider Reasons for taxation - what it’s for Principles of taxation – what taxes should look like Types of tax.
Westminster after Devolution Oonagh Gay, November 2007
The Economic and Fiscal Issues Facing Scotland,
CHAPTER 22 TAXES AND GOV’T SPENDING. Federal Gov’t We authorize the federal government, through the Constitution and our elected representatives in Congress,
Scotland’s tax powers: the 30 minute guide Anne-Marie Roberts Head of Taxation (Scottish Taxes and Indirect Taxes), ICAS 17 March 2016.
Scotland’s new financial powers: the opportunities and risks Caroline Gardner Auditor General for Scotland.
The UK Constitutional Arrangement
Mapping the United Kingdom
Today we will… Explain the background to the Scotland Act (2016)
How Designated Special Status for Northern Ireland within the EU
Fiscal Framework Agreement CIPFA Scottish Conference
What does the Scotland Act 2016 mean for Social Housing?
3.4 Managing the Economy Fiscal Policy
Where next for Welfare Reform? Alistair Reid.
Lesson Starter List the five different types of Bills. Choose one and give examples of legislation passed. Why have different types of bills? What is.
Managing risk and performance in an increasingly devolved Scotland
The Coalition UK Government and Devolution
The UK Trade Bill – a commentary
Tax Aspects of Further Devolution Proposals
FINANCIAL AND FISCAL COMMISSION – Budget Analysis Unit
Presentation transcript:

'Devo More' not 'Devo Max': The realistic possibilities Alan Trench Stevenson Lecture, University of Glasgow 11 November 2014

The impact of the referendum Not just a rejection of independence, but an endorsement of Scotland’s future lying within the Union, with further devolution Devolution is not an opt-out from UK rule, but a system of combining self-rule with shared rule And not something Scotland can unilaterally decide: – requires negotiation, partnership with the UK Parliament & Govt, and other devolved legislatures and govts Implies further devolution should be union- reinforcing, not union-undermining

What is ‘more devolution’? Greater self-government within UK clear preference of plurality (often majority) of Scottish voters in run-up to referendum Always unclear what that meant in terms of powers: Scottish Govt already responsible for c. 65% of public spending in Scotland, has extensive legislative powers Design of devolution preserves UK-wide social security system, UK-wide economy and internal market (macro and regulatory – some devolution of micro instruments) Devolved welfare functions distributive not redistribu- tive ones (and built on admin devolution to Scottish Office)

What is ‘more devolution’? II Public are concerned about taxation and welfare – According to SSA, c. 60 per cent of voters thought these should be devolved – around same levels as health and education But SG is funded by block grant from Westminster, with minimal tax powers And has no welfare competences Are we talking about a fundamental redesign of devolution, or extending it to address those issues? Fundamental redesign raises large and complex issues – Not promised by any of the pro-UK parties – Impact on other parts of the UK? – Can’t be accomplished in Smith Commission’s timescale

‘Devolution’ brings structural constraints 1.The UK tax system UK is fiscally very centralised, system not used to territorial differentiation Scotland Act 2012 helps a good deal 2.EU law Limits tax options – a single VAT, state aid rules. 3.The Treaty of Union Single excise duty, no customs duties 4.A UK social union Costs of old age pensions Key, UK-wide benefits – JSA, ESA (UC)

Digression 1: ‘Devo Max’ Set out most clearly in Scottish Govt 2009 white paper Your Scotland Your Choice Devolution of all non-sovereign functions: everything but defence, foreign affairs, currency and macro- economy Implies full fiscal autonomy: Scottish Parliament respon- sible for setting and collecting all taxes in/for Scotland – End to UK welfare state – Tax competition? — VAT? What about - Immigration?- Business & financial regulation? - EU matters?- Old age state pensions?

‘Devo Max’ II So: actually problematic in many respects – not a ‘straightforward’ solution What sort of a Union is one Scotland largely opts out of? Is that the union 55 per cent voted for on 18 September? Is that acceptable to the rest of the UK? Doesn’t the rest of UK need to consent to that sort of fundamental change? – How? A UK-wide referendum? – What happens if Scotland votes Yes but rest of UK votes No?

Some other problems fiscal devolution has to face Must devolve major taxes – this is first and foremost about the relationship between spending commitments and revenues to fund those But that is hard given centralisation of the tax system Avoid creating spillovers – where transactions take place for tax reasons not because they were going to take place anyway Plus, want to avoid devolving volatile tax sources – – Devolved services are inflationary/counter-cyclical in nature, want taxes to match that (or ideally which are counter- cyclical!) And think about compliance and administrative costs

Good taxes to devolve Taxes on land – Non domestic rate and council tax already devolved – Stamp duty land tax (land and buildings transaction tax) and landfill tax devolved from April 2015 – Aggregates levy? – Capital gains tax on land transactions Taxes on income – Huge tax base – often shared in federal systems – employee’s National Insurance Contributions a way to share it Taxes on sales – Growing tax base – But EU rules prohibit devolution of VAT

Some bad taxes to devolve Taxes on transactions, movable items, taxes which undermine the overall tax base Corporation tax – Declining tax base – To avoid brass-plating, limit to proportion of profits generated in a particular area – High compliance costs, esp for small businesses Fuel duty, tobacco duty (mobility) Inheritance tax (killed in Australia and Canada)

North Sea oil and gas Needs to go with control of the licensing regime as well as corporation tax devolution Which implies a huge shift in control of the UK economy What about other parts of the UK that formerly had natural resources but don’t now? The one thing worse than devolution would be assignment! – Volatility but unable to control revenues

Major taxes and their revenues 2010/11

So … Local taxation is c. 8.5 per cent of revenues, related to land, already devolved Personal income tax is c. 23 per cent of total tax receipts, suitable for devolution VAT is c. 18 per cent of total receipts, can’t be devolved (EU rules) NICs total c. 18 per cent of total receipts, really two taxes – a supplemental, not very well designed, income tax on employees, and a payroll tax on employers – Link to welfare state functions, and the old age pension – Access for UK Govt to income tax base? – Devolving employee’s NICs doesn’t make much sense. Devolving employer’s NICs might. Corporation tax is c. 6 of tax revenues. Also pretty volatile, and mobile. EU state aids issues too. Fuel duties are also highly mobile

The Devo More fiscal package All personal income tax – including rates, thresholds, exemptions and reliefs Assigned share of VAT (can’t devolve) – 10 points Smaller taxes: – Land taxes (already largely there through SA 2012/Wales bill, and council tax/NDR) – Alcohol and tobacco duties desirable (though there are serious legal and practical difficulties) – New taxes? The next least-bad tax to devolve would be employers’ National Insurance Contributions Plus a redistributive block grant, based on relative need – With reductions to allow for fiscal capacity for devolved tax bases, to be reviewed periodically

The impact of tax devolution on SG budget

Digression 2: the Barnett formula The Barnett formula is generous to Scotland financially, but doesn’t do it many favours in other ways Integration into Whitehall’s financial system is constitutionally inappropriate for governments with separate control (the ‘English model of public services’) Plus gives Treasury control over what triggers a consequential, control when disagreements In any case, convergence will start to happen in next decade if there is nominal growth in public spending And Calman-style tax devolution will mean an increasingly notional calculation of the block grant

Devo More and welfare Based on maintaining a UK-wide social union, treating all citizens equally wherever they live Means key benefits that affect life chances need to remain UK- wide: JSA, ESA, disability benefits In one country, should those really have different eligibility criteria depending on where you live? But including devolution of benefits that overlap with devolved services Housing Benefit (problematic because of UC) Attendance Allowance (only benefit where devolved govt can remove eligibility of a claimant) And administration of Work Programme (but not JSA/ESA for WP participants) How to calculate funding for devolved benefits? (Proxies)

Devo More and welfare II Plus power for devolved governments to supplement UK- level welfare payments from their own resources A spending power Gets around constitutional prohibition on providing cash benefits (cf strange design of both long term care for elderly and anti- bedroom-tax measures) Which could be used at the margin (help for jobseekers) Or more substantially (additional child benefit?) And would let introduction of new programmes How to use this? A new agency, or piggy-back on existing ones eg Jobcentre Plus Impact of welfare devolution on how much of its spending SG raises itself?

Devolved welfare and tax raising

‘More devolution’ and the parties Lib Dems: – Devolve all personal income tax save personal allowance – Assign corporation tax revenues – No welfare devolution Labour – Increase devolution of income tax from 10 to 15 points – Upward but not downward differential increases of top rates – Preserve Barnett formula – Devolve Housing Benefit, Attendance Allowance, operation of Work Programme Conservatives – Devolve all personal income tax save personal allowance – Assign proportion of VAT revenues – Devolve HB, AA, power to supplement UK-level welfare

Comparing forms of further fiscal devolution

‘Constitutional devolution’ Devolve control over the ‘devolved constitution’ Number of deputy presiding officers, size of Parliament, number of ministers, electoral system Need to ensure consensus for changes: two-thirds majority vote?

What does ‘more devolution’ mean? Wider control over policy levers – able to use all relevant levers, not just ones that happened to be devolved Power to introduce new welfare and tax policies – It’s easier to introduce new programmes than restructure existing ones Enabling tax and welfare to be devolved at the margin – but it’s a very wide margin So – Scotland could have prevented application of the bedroom tax – Could justify the costs as well as benefits of a universal child- care scheme – No question about preserving the NHS – Could restructure long-term for elderly in more rational way if Scottish taxpayers are willing to pay for those measures

The constitution isn’t just about Scotland England: English votes for English laws at Westminster Regional/city-regional devolution Wales: Wales bill: Calman-style tax devolution, with referen- dum, but no lockstep Devolution of policing, criminal justice. ‘Reserved powers’ model? Northern Ireland Corporation tax devolution Haass process: flags/parading, historic legacies Welfare reform: un-devolution?

A UK constitutional convention? Supporters: Carwyn Jones/Welsh Govt, Commons PCRC, ERS, Unlock Democracy, Labour Party The least-bad idea in town? Who, with what authority, chosen by him, when, for how long, with what remit, who determines the remit, what happens to the report/outcome?

A sort-of federal future for the UK? For Scotland and Wales, the ‘self-rule’ side of a federal system is conceivable and not that far off For N Ireland, it’s harder because of the consociational elements of the Belfast Agreement, and role of UK and Irish Govts in assuring that England is a major obstacle to any moves toward federalism – Symmetrical regionalism has no popular support – But England is so big as a whole it would distort, perhaps destroy any federal system The ‘shared rule’ side is even more difficult: – Lords reform has to be a key part – And also implies changes to role of the Commons, the UK Cabinet and civil service that have been avoided so far

Read the Funding Devo More report devo-more-fiscal-options-for-strengthening-the-union Read the Devo More and Welfare report Read my blog, Devolution Matters: Follow me on