H
trending
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Next Scottish government faces ‘really difficult’ spending choices, economists say

about 7 hours ago
A picture


The next Scottish government will need to make “really difficult” spending decisions soon after taking power, including tackling its large public sector pay bill, senior economists have said.Economists with the Fraser of Allander Institute, at the University of Strathclyde, believe the manifestos published by Scotland’s political parties during the campaign failed to tell voters about the true scale of the challenge.Prof Mairi Spowage, the institute’s director, said the next government would need to have a “reckoning” after the 7 May election because the last Scottish National party administration consistently spent more money than it received from its core sources of funding.She said it had been heavily reliant on non-recurring windfalls, such as fees from the ScotWind offshore wind licensing round or one-off payments from the Treasury, to fund its higher spending.The next government would therefore face the most challenging budget since the Scottish parliament was founded in 1999, she said, and may need to cut this year’s spending to cope with the shortfall.

“The parties have engaged in a collective bout of fiscal denial with manifestos which have lots of commitments, yes, some ways to save money, but any money that is saved is then spent immediately,” she said at a recent briefing for economists.“We can’t go on as we are, never mind spend more money.”The FAI’s analysis shows that, on average, Scottish public spending has grown in real terms by 3.9% a year since 2019.Yet its income from taxes, the UK government’s annual grant and one-off sums from energy levies and so on grew by only 3.

6% a year.Scottish spending has also grown “significantly” faster than the UK’s, which has been limited to 3% a year on average over the same period, partly because the SNP government breached its policies on public sector pay, the FAI said.Last year, the Scottish government estimated it faced a £5bn gulf between its spending commitments and income by the end of this decade.SNP ministers published a revised spending strategy in January, which they said would cope with much of that overspend.The Scottish Fiscal Commission, the official watchdog, forecasts spending for day to day Scottish services will rise by only 1% a year over the next five years.

The FAI’s analysis echoes the view of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, which said on Monday none of the parties’ plans were “fiscally credible”,David Phillips, the IFS’s lead on devolved government finances, said every party displayed a “lack of realism regarding just how tough the fiscal challenges facing the next Scottish government are”,João Sousa, the FAI’s deputy director, said the last Scottish government had trimmed its spending plans in January to partly address the funding gaps but there were still a number of “unexploded traps” laying in wait for the next administration,Those include meeting the costs of public sector pay growth, future health and social care cost increases and funding Scotland’s rising social security bill, which is forecast to be £1,2bn higher than its share of UK welfare spending by 2031.

The Scottish government spends nearly half its £59bn annual budget on pay, such as council refuse workers, doctors, nurses and teachers.Two years ago, it set a public sector pay policy to cap pay rises at 9% over the next three years, with no year exceeding 3%.But its actual pay deals, using collective bargaining with public sector unions, took up 8% of that within two years.Sousa said that 9% cap would have to be breached next year if public sector pay were to keep pace with inflation.And as these wage increases were recurring costs, every future government would have to keep funding them unless there were cuts in public sector employment.

Scottish ministers say they can save £1.5bn through efficiency savings and cutting the public sector workforce, chiefly by natural wastage.Sousa said that approach lacked credibility and ministers could “only paper over things for so long.”All the major parties in this election – the SNP, Labour and the Conservatives – have promised voters they will not raise income tax, and said they aspired to cut income tax or to simplify the system once government finances allowed.Prof Graeme Roy and Prof Anton Muscatelli, of Glasgow University, and Prof Stuart McIntyre, of Strathclyde university, three of Scotland’s leading economists said the next government’s “overarching challenge will be economic and fiscal”.

Writing in the Economics Observatory journal, they said: “Slow growth in living standards, an ageing population and rising spending pressures mean that the next parliament will face difficult budgetary choices,A prolonged conflict in the Middle East may make that position even more challenging, particularly if the UK overall becomes even more constrained fiscally,”
trendingSee all
A picture

HSBC profits fall amid $400m fraud-related charge and Iran war

HSBC has taken a $1.3bn (£961m) hit to profits, fuelled by the fallout from the US-Israel war on Iran and fraud in the troubled private credit sector.The London-headquartered bank said profits fell 4% in the first three months of the year, dropping $100m to $9.4bn, compared with the same period in 2025. Revenue increased 6% to $18

about 4 hours ago
A picture

‘There is a good deal of fear’: what would a Labour leadership challenge mean for bond markets?

Who calls the shots on the bin collections in Sunderland, potholes in Hackney, or schools in Cardiff is not normally of interest to City traders in the multitrillion-pound sovereign bond market.But for those dealing in UK government debt, Thursday’s local and devolved government elections are significantly more important than usual, amid speculation that a dire showing for Keir Starmer’s Labour party could topple him as prime minister.“Usually local elections should not be a market relevant event, but this has indeed become one,” said Sanjay Raja, the chief UK economist at Deutsche Bank.“Mainly as the repercussions, not just from a leadership challenge, but also any changes to fiscal policy and any pressure on fiscal rules the chancellor had signed up to. That is what the market is really signed up to

about 5 hours ago
A picture

Vine video-sharing app is back – and battling AI slop

As a pioneer of the short-form video format, Vine has been credited as one of the most influential – if short-lived – social media platforms.The app, which allowed users to record a looping six seconds of video, boomed in popularity after its launch in 2013, spawning a plethora of viral comedy sketches and internet memes. It hit 100 million monthly active users at its peak and helped launch the careers of influencers such as Logan Paul.It was snapped up by Twitter – now X – soon after its creation, but closed in 2017 after the platform failed to make the sums add up.Jack Dorsey, Twitter’s co-founder, is now backing an attempt to bring back a revamped version of the much-loved platform with a new philosophy: to be the short-form video app offering “freedom from AI slop”

about 22 hours ago
A picture

GameStop makes $55.5bn takeover offer for eBay

US video games retailer GameStop has offered to buy eBay for $55.5bn (£41bn) in an unsolicited bid that its boss warned could turn hostile if the proposal is rebuffed by eBay’s board.GameStop, which has quietly accumulated a 5% stake in eBay, said it was willing to pay $125 a share, split 50-50 between cash and stock.It is an ambitious move by the games company, which catapulted to fame during the meme-stock craze of 2021 but is worth far less than its takeover target. GameStop had a market valuation of roughly $12bn on Friday before its bid, while eBay – originally launched as a side hobby by its founder Pierre Omidyar in 1995 – is worth about $46bn

about 24 hours ago
A picture

‘He’s too young to retire’: Cam Smith and Australian golf ponder life without LIV’s riches

He was Australian golf’s shining light, a likeable everyman whose career has found the rough. Now, Cameron Smith “may be rethinking” his decision to stick with LIV Golf, according to the head of the PGA of Australia, after Saudi Arabian investors withdrew funding from the upstart tour.The entire Australian golf sector is wrestling with what a future without LIV – or with a fiscally restrained LIV-lite – might look like, as the South Australia government pushes on with spending $45m for an upgrade to a course still scheduled to host a LIV tournament from 2028.Australia’s golfing institutions are immune to any collapse of LIV, yet the links within the sport run deep. As the body for golf’s professionals, the PGA of Australia wants the best for Smith and his countrymen

about 8 hours ago
A picture

Excitement builds in Tasmania as state gets behind Devils ahead of AFL entry | Joe Moore

When the original rules of the game were being written in Melbourne, Tasmanians were playing footy, too. It’s taken 160 years for the state to get its first genuine chance at the elite level, but early signs indicate the Tasmania Football Club is thriving.For now, the Devils are playing in the second-tier VFL competition, but that is only as a two-year pathway to a guaranteed place in the AFL and AFLW.Locals have been voting with their feet. In March, the Devils debuted by selling out their first game at North Hobart Oval

about 10 hours ago
recentSee all
A picture

HSBC hit by $400m UK fraud-related charge; Rachel Reeves ‘clashed with Scott Bessent’ over Iran war criticism – business live

about 3 hours ago
A picture

Vodafone to take full control of UK mobile operator in £4.3bn deal

about 4 hours ago
A picture

GameStop shares fall 10% after CEO skirts questions over eBay acquisition details

about 14 hours ago
A picture

AI platforms reference Nigel Farage more than other leaders when prompted on UK politics, study shows

about 19 hours ago
A picture

Carlton fined $75,000 for mishandling of Elijah Hollands’ mental health episode

about 4 hours ago
A picture

These are the questions I would ask the Enhanced Games … if they would let me | Sean Ingle

about 4 hours ago