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August 23, 2018

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Scotland shrinks large budget deficit to lowest since 2012

Scotland’s large budget deficit shrank in the last financial year to its lowest since 2012 but remained far larger in percentage terms than that of the United Kingdom as a whole, Scottish government data showed yesterday.

The health of Scotland’s economy, as Britain prepares to leave the European Union in March 2019, is a key issue affecting Scottish voters’ appetite for independence. Opinion polls put support for independence at about 45 percent.

Data showed that Scotland’s net fiscal deficit shrank to 13.4 billion pounds (US$17.1 billion) in the 2017/18 tax year from 14.5 billion pounds the year before, helped by stronger North Sea oil and gas revenues.

As a percentage of gross domestic product, the deficit fell to 7.9 percent from 8.9 percent — the lowest since 2011/12 but far higher than in the UK as a whole, where public sector net borrowing was 1.9 percent of GDP in 2017/18.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon described Brexit yesterday as a “real and present danger” for Scotland and Britain’s economy.

She said she was not opposed to the UK holding a second vote on EU membership — a cause championed by an increasing number of people opposed to Brexit.

But with a majority of voters in Scotland having already voted in the 2016 referendum on EU membership to stay in the bloc, Sturgeon said, the question for Scots now was whether they should continue to be part of a Britain heading for Brexit.

Scotland and Northern Ireland voted in the referendum to remain in the EU, while England — by far the most populous of the home nations — and Wales voted to leave.

In 2014 Scottish voters rejected independence from the rest of Britain by 55 percent to 45 percent.

British Prime Minister Theresa May has ruled out a second vote on EU membership and says it is “not the time” for another Scottish independence vote.

Sturgeon defends higher Scottish public spending and blames deficit-reduction policies imposed by May’s Conservatives for rising income gaps across Britain.




 

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