Health and Education at heart of budget

5 Feb 2015 12:46 PM

Swinney outlines plans to tackle inequality, boost the economy and protect public services.

Deputy First Minister John Swinney yesterday set out the Scottish Government spending plans to create a fairer and more prosperous Scotland. At the heart of the Budget is the recognition that a strong economy is only successful, if it is underpinned by a society that is fair and equitable.

Setting out the budget to parliament, Mr Swinney said the plans respond to Scotland’s improving economic conditions and would enhance economic growth, tackle inequalities and continue to protect and invest in Scotland’s public services.

The Finance Secretary also put key public services of health and education at the heart of the budget confirming an increase of £383m in frontline health spending next year and setting out the government’s commitment to our teaching workforce and their key role in raising attainment and tackling inequality with £51m investment to maintain teacher numbers and £20m of new spending to improve educational life chances for all.

The Scottish budget is set against the context of cuts by Westminster to the Scottish Government’s Fiscal DEL budget of around 10 per cent in real terms over five years, including capital spending cuts of over 25 per cent in real terms.

Mr Swinney set out the following key additions to the original budget yesterday:

Setting out the budget to parliament John Swinney said yesterday:

“The people of Scotland want to live in a more prosperous and a much fairer country than it is today.

“This budget is focused on meeting those ambitions, as far as we can within our current powers, by tackling inequality, investing in our economy and protecting and reforming our public services.

“This budget will see £4.5 billion invested in infrastructure with new colleges, health facilities and schools being built across the country.

“This budget continues our actions to mitigate UK Government welfare cuts with £81m of support and delivers on our commitments to expand childcare and to provide free school meals for all p1-p3 pupils.

“It is also a landmark budget, including for the first time our proposals for the rates and bands of Scottish Landfill Tax and Land & Buildings Transaction Tax, devolved through the Scotland Act 2012 and which take effect for the first time in 2015-16. As a result 50% of homebuyers will pay no tax and over 90% of taxpayers will pay no tax at all or be better off compared to the UK’s current tax rates.

Focussing on health and education the Finance Secretary said yesterday:

“The health of our population and the education of our young people are two of the most important responsibilities of government and they are at the top of our priorities.

“A vote for the budget today will see an additional £127m of extra spending for frontline healthcare in our NHS. That will take our total additional frontline investment for 2015-16 to £383 million as part of a total NHS budget in excess of £12 billion, and every penny of that money will help our frontline services.

“The education of Scotland’s children is the key to both their future and to the future of Scotland. Our investment in schools and in teachers forms a critical part of this effort but we can and will do more. When sufficient funding is available to support the employment of teachers it cannot be acceptable that the numbers of teachers declined slightly last year and the ratio of pupils to teachers rose slightly.

“To help ensure delivery of the teacher numbers commitment and in recognition of the general budget pressures authorities are facing I am providing a further £10 million for 2015-16 in addition to the £41 million previously allocated to support this commitment. In order to protect that investment in teacher numbers this total resource of £51 million will only be available to local authorities on a council by council basis if they are prepared to sign up to a clear commitment to protect teacher numbers. Any council that does not make and deliver on that commitment will not benefit from that funding.

“As we signaled in the Programme for Government tackling inequality is one of our key priorities. Too many of our young people have life chances narrowed by circumstances out of their control. Improving opportunities for our children will require focused and targeted action; it will involve providing additional support to our teachers and parents.

“Today I am announcing £20 million additional funding to improve educational life chances for all and raise attainment. This funding for this coming year will be followed by further funding in next year’s budget and the details of how this additional investment will be utilised will be announced shortly.

“The actions I have taken today demonstrate the values and priorities of the Scottish Government. We drive forward investment in our economy, we protect our NHS, we invest in our young people and businesses and we protect the most vulnerable.”

The following key commitments were also reaffirmed:

To make Scotland a more prosperous country the budget will:

To tackle inequalities the budget will:

To protect and reform Public Services the budget will: