Scotland’s Economy Debate

Full Debate: Read Full Debate

Scotland’s Economy

Tracy Gilbert Excerpts
Tuesday 15th October 2024

(1 day, 13 hours ago)

Westminster Hall
Read Full debate Read Hansard Text

Westminster Hall is an alternative Chamber for MPs to hold debates, named after the adjoining Westminster Hall.

Each debate is chaired by an MP from the Panel of Chairs, rather than the Speaker or Deputy Speaker. A Government Minister will give the final speech, and no votes may be called on the debate topic.

This information is provided by Parallel Parliament and does not comprise part of the offical record

Tracy Gilbert Portrait Tracy Gilbert (Edinburgh North and Leith) (Lab)
- Hansard - -

I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Glasgow East (John Grady) on securing this important debate. Ahead of the general election, Prosper Scotland summed up the hurdles that the Government face, in addition to the challenges of decarbonisation and an ageing population, as well as even greater technological challenges, when it said:

“What is also evident is that our economy has struggled for the decade and a half since the financial crisis in 2007-08, a weakness that ill-prepared our society for when recent crises came.”

It is fair to say that that is a damning indictment of the Tories’ and SNP’s handling of the economy.

However, I believe that the best days lie ahead for Edinburgh North and Leith and for Scotland. We have the natural assets and the key ingredients to deliver economic growth. On the green economy and the sprint to clean power, Scotland already generates significant amounts of clean power, and if the Scottish Government give consent to Berwick Bank, we could boast the largest offshore wind farm in the world within a few years. We need to secure manufacturing and supply chain jobs to support the energy transition in Scotland, at sites such as the port of Leith in my constituency.

To deliver Brand Scotland, we need to rip through the border and sell Scotland not just to ourselves, but to the rest of the world. We have salmon, shortbread, Tunnock’s teacakes, Irn-Bru, Lind & Lime gin and Johnnie Walker—a distillery that not only sells whisky to the world, but welcomes more than 1 million visitors a year to its whisky experience in my constituency. We need to market those brands to every corner of the globe.

Edinburgh is the largest tech hub but, with the scale of innovation, we are creating more tech jobs than ever that cannot be filled. That leads me nicely to the key ask of this debate: for both of Scotland’s Governments to work together. With the devolution settlement, it is not possible for the UK Government alone to deliver economic growth for Scotland. That means celebrating achievements together, but also tackling the blockers—a bureaucratic planning system, a skills shortage and women struggling to enter the workplace, to name but a few.

Finally, for workers across Scotland, a fair day’s work must mean a fair day’s pay. I am delighted that the Labour Government brought forward the new deal for workers within their first 100 days, and I look forward to the biggest increase in workers’ rights for a generation becoming a reality for workers across Edinburgh North and Leith and Scotland in the coming years.

--- Later in debate ---
John Lamont Portrait John Lamont
- Hansard - - - Excerpts

I will make some progress, if I may, as I have taken a number of interventions.

Our workers and businesses have been poorly served by a nationalist Government who have too often been distracted from the day job and who have too often overlooked and sometimes even ignored what small businesses have said.

Let me outline how stark the situation has become. A recent survey by the Fraser of Allander Institute at the University of Strathclyde highlighted two key points. First, just 9% of Scottish firms agree that the Scottish Government understand the business environment in Scotland. Secondly, just 8% of businesses agree that the Scottish Government engage effectively with their sector. Those statistics should have been a wake-up call for the SNP to reset its relationship with the business community. It has been promising that reset for years, but it simply has not happened and the consequences are now becoming clear.

Compared with 10 years ago, the Scottish economy has also grown more slowly than the United Kingdom’s economy overall. GDP in Scotland is 8.4% larger in quarter 2 of 2024 compared with in quarter 2 of 2014, whereas UK GDP is 14.3% higher. Although the nationalists may try to claim an excuse by citing different population-based figures, the Fraser of Allander Institute have already dismantled that, too. Its most recent economic commentary found that,

“even when the differential population growth in the UK and Scotland is accounted for…growth in Scotland per person over the last 10 years has been 6% for the UK, compared to 4.3% for Scotland”.

It is crystal clear that ever since the independence referendum, Scotland has suffered from an SNP slowdown. The SNP’s damaging business policies and harmful decision to bring the Greens, who do not even believe in economic growth, into government has cost our country dearly. Scotland’s economy is crying out for something different, but it is not happening at the moment. Labour and the SNP offer only more of the same old ideas. John Swinney and Anas Sarwar favour most of the same policies. They both want higher taxes on workers. They both expect businesses to pick up the bill for a bigger state. They have the same socialist ideology that has failed Scotland for decades.

The left-wing parties in the Scottish Parliament have become disconnected from the lives of normal people. They spend too much time on divisive policies and fringe obsessions like gender reform and they do not spend enough time, energy, and resources on driving Scotland’s economy forward. Scottish Conservatives are proudly standing up against that left-wing consensus of the political establishment in Scotland. Scotland’s workers, businesses and indeed our entire economy need a different approach. They need a new way forward.

Tracy Gilbert Portrait Tracy Gilbert
- Hansard - -

Does the hon. Gentleman agree with me that the new deal for working people would lift hundreds and thousands of families out of poverty, and that can only be good for Scotland?

John Lamont Portrait John Lamont
- Hansard - - - Excerpts

I am grateful for that intervention. I did not quite catch the first point, but the previous Government had a proud record of improving the lives of people across the length and breadth of Scotland by lifting people and families—and children in particular—out of poverty. That is a record the previous Government are rightly proud of.

I wait to hear what the new Government are going to do, and what the Budget will contain. I know from businesses, many communities and residents that there is a great fear of higher tax and more money going out of people’s pockets, which will do nothing to deal with poverty in many communities the length and breadth of Scotland.

The Scottish Conservatives are determined to deliver the stronger economic growth our country desperately needs. Under our new leader, Russell Findlay, the Scottish Conservatives will put forward a positive vision for the future of our country that champions the values of mainstream Scotland—opportunity, aspiration and decency. We will present positive new policies to fire up Scotland’s economic growth, create opportunities for workers and businesses, and reward aspiration with lower taxation.