Support, skills and sustainability critical to delivering recovery-focused Scottish Budget

24 Jan 2021 07:09 PM

CBI Scotland has called on Finance Secretary Kate Forbes to prioritise support, skills and sustainability in the forthcoming Budget to kickstart economic recovery and avoid the risk of losing further months of stymied activity and uncertainty to the pandemic.

With the Scottish economy struggling with fragile growth even before COVID-19 hit, Scotland’s leading business organisation has pinpointed the Scottish Budget as a key moment to focus attention back on economic priorities, including protecting jobs and livelihoods in the short term and kickstarting efforts to build back better from the pandemic.  

With the COVID-19 pandemic having hit hard across the Scottish economy, from the immediately impacted hospitality, leisure and tourism sectors to wider supply chains and even higher education, CBI Scotland has identified a number of actions that can help get the economy back on track. These include:

  1. Cement short-term support for businesses to protect jobs:
  1. Invest in people to give them the skills and support they need:
  1. Prioritise immediate actions that will set us on the path to a net zero economy:

Full recommendations are listed in the letter to the Finance Secretary.

Tracy Black, CBI Scotland Director, yesterday said:

“With Covid transmission rates at worryingly high levels, the country in severe lockdown and a new more virulent strains of the virus to contend with, it can feel as though we’re caught in the eye of a storm. Many companies across Scotland remain in a precarious position and, alongside public health, protecting jobs and livelihoods has to be a primary focus.

“But the immediate challenge must not prevent us from investing in the future. We need to start laying the foundations for recovery now and putting in place a clear plan for building back better from the pandemic. Unlocking the private sector is pivotal to kickstarting recovery and limiting the lasting economic damage done by COVID-19. That’s why we need to create a stable, competitive, pro-business environment where firms can grow, recruit and invest with confidence.

“CBI Scotland argues that a budget focused on support, skills and sustainability can bolster Scotland’s short and long-term economic prospects. That means protecting the companies that will deliver growth, investing properly in our workforce and building a net zero economy that not only delivers a better environmental future, but an economic one too. Sustainability can be a competitive advantage for Scotland for years to come and deliver a real jobs boost at a time when we need it most.”