Finance and Public Administration Committee
The Scottish Budget 2025-261 was published on 4 December 2024 and sets out the Scottish Governmentâs proposed tax and spending plans for the next financial year. This was accompanied by the Scottish Fiscal Commission's (SFC's) latest set of forecasts2for the economy, tax revenues, and social security spending which, alongside forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), informs the overall size of the Scottish Budget for 2025-26.
The Scottish Government has stated that the 2025-26 Budget is âaffordable and sustainableâ. The Budget is, it notes, however set against âcontinued and unprecedented challenges to the public financesâ, and while the increased funding in the UK Autumn Budget âwas a step in the right direction, it was only small progress in the face of the ongoing pressures we faceâ.1
Capital funding in 2025-26 is expected to increase by 12% in real terms compared to the previous year, while resource funding sees a more modest increase of 0.8%, despite a larger increase to the Scottish block grant. This, the SFC explains, is largely due to forecasts of income tax revenues in the UK increasing more than in Scotland, with a consequential reduction to the Scottish Budget of ÂŁ575 millioni.2
It is against this background that the Finance and Public Administration Committee publishes the findings of our scrutiny of the Scottish Budget 2025-26. Key areas of focus include the Scottish Governmentâs approach to taxation, growing the economy and public service reform, building on the recommendations in our pre-budget report 2025-26.5
In that report, we outlined significant concerns about the Scottish Governmentâs lack of strategic approach to managing Scotlandâs public finances, with little evidence of medium- or longer-term financial planning taking place as well as challenges in balancing budgets in year. While these concerns remain, more certainty around the timing of UK fiscal events and a UK spending review on the horizon bring welcome opportunities for the Scottish Government to now adopt a much-needed strategic approach to budget planning. Indeed, many of our recommendations in this report are intended to urge and support greater progress in this regard.
The report also reflects our consideration of the Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Bodyâs (SPCBâs) budget proposal for 2025-26, as required under the Session 6 Agreement between the Committee and the SPCB.
The Committee thanks our adviser, Professor Mairi Spowage and the Financial Scrutiny Unit in the Scottish Parliamentâs Information Centre (SPICe) for their support in our scrutiny of the Scottish Budget 2025-26. We also thank our witnesses for their valuable evidence, which has helped shape our findings and recommendations.
A public spending audit 2024-251 published by HM Treasury in July 2024 identified a ÂŁ21.9 billion (bn) forecast overspend against UK spending plans and included ÂŁ5.5bn in savings in 2024-25 rising to ÂŁ8.1bn in 2025-26, including through targeting winter fuel payments from this year.
The Scottish Government announced its own set of spending controls on 23 August2. The reduction in funding for winter fuel payments for 2024-25 meant that the payments of ÂŁ200 and ÂŁ300 were cut for pensioners under 80 and older than 80 respectively for all pensioners not on pension credit. The Scottish Government committed to a payment of at least ÂŁ100 to all pensioners from 2025-26 at a cost of ÂŁ67m. Further savings measures were announced on 3 September3, including resuming peak train fares and not progressing the concessionary fares extension to the asylum seekersâ pilot. At that time, the Scottish Government also planned to use up to ÂŁ460m of ScotWind money to plug funding gaps. The Cabinet Secretary for Finance and Local Government suggested that this âconsiderable strain on our financesâ followed the UK Governmentâs acceptance of the Pay Review Bodyâs recommendationsi.
The UK Autumn Budget1 announced on 30 October 2024 included significant increases in public spending, financed by a combination of tax rises and higher borrowing. Public spending in the UK is set to increase by ÂŁ70bn per year over the next five years, with two-thirds going to day-to-day resource spending, and one-third to capital spend, such as transport, housing and research and development. The Chancellor of the Exchequer suggested that this rise in capital spending will âkeep public investment broadly flat at around 2.5% of GDPi over the next five years, rather than dropping to the 1.7% assumed in the previous Governmentâs plans".2
Key tax measures announced by the Chancellor includeâ
employer National Insurance Contributions (NICs) are to rise by 1.2 percentage points to 15% from 6 April 2025. The level at which employers will start paying NICs for each employee will fall from ÂŁ9,100 to ÂŁ5,000. This measure is forecast to raise ÂŁ25.7bn per year by 2029-30,
capital gains tax is to rise on disposals made on or after 30 October 2024 (the lower rate from 10% to 18%, and the higher rate from 20% to 24%),
the freezing of inheritance tax thresholds will be extended to 2030ii. From April 2026, inheritance tax relief for business and agricultural assets is to be capped at ÂŁ1m, with a new reduced rate of 20% being charged on assets above that,
Value-added Tax (VAT) will be charged on private school fees across the UK,
the temporary 5p cut in fuel duty announced by the previous Government is to be extended for one year to 2025-26, and
the freeze in income tax thresholds is set to end in 2028-29, at which point thresholds will increase in line with inflation (England only).
The Chancellor also announced increases in borrowing, averaging around ÂŁ32bn per annum higher than the previous Governmentâs plans over the forecast period. To allow space for this extra borrowing, the Chancellor has changed the definition of debt in her fiscal rules, targeting Public Sector Net Financial Liabilities (PSNFL)iii as the main balance sheet aggregate.
Decisions in the UK Autumn Budget have led to additional consequential funding for the Scottish Budget, with ÂŁ1.5bn added to the 2024-25 budgetiv, rising to ÂŁ3.4bn for 2025-26v. During evidence to the Committee on the Autumn Budget Revision on 12 November 2024, the Minister for Public Finance welcomed the additional funding, while arguing it âis necessary to correct for persistent underinvestment in public services and to address the cost pressures that we faceâ.3
The UK Government is currently carrying out a spending review taking a âzero-based budgetingâ approachvi, which is due to conclude in late Spring 2025. It has also committed to holding one full fiscal event a year, in the autumn, with Spring statements expected to focus on the economic and fiscal outlook, rather than used to announce major policy decisions.4
The SFCâs December 2024 Economic and Fiscal Forecasts state that âthe outlook for the Scottish economy is higher GDP growth in 2025-26 than in 2024-25, in part as a result of the UK Governmentâs fiscal expansion, and inflation is also expected to be slightly higher in 2025-26 than in 2024-25â. It goes on to explain that although UK Government decisions have resulted in additional funding for the Scottish Government through the Block Grant in both 2024-25 and 2025-26, â⌠the working of the fiscal framework and larger upward revisions to UK income tax revenue forecasts than our Scottish forecasts mean the income tax net position used to set the Scottish Budget has reduced funding by ÂŁ575m between 2024-25 and 2025-26â. It adds âthis means that the overall changes in the Scottish Budget are more modestâ.1 The SFC further notes thatâ
over the past year, âthe Scottish economy and labour market have performed slightly better than we expected in December 2023, but are broadly on track with our last forecastâ,
GDP has increased marginally after being flat since early 2022, and ânominal earnings growth has remained relatively strong in a still tight labour marketâ. The SFCâs Forecasts show GDP growth rising to 1.6% in 2025-26, before returning to its trend rate of 1.4% by 2027-28, âwhich reflects our higher migration and population assumptionâ,
stronger earnings growth, combined with lower inflation than expected a year ago, has resulted in living standards recovering more rapidly from their fall in 2022-23,
Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation is expected to rise to 2.6% across the UK in 2025-26, revised up from 1.6% in the SFCâs last forecast, which âfeeds through to higher nominal earnings growth in both Scotland and the UK in 2025-26â, and
in its view, the labour market in Scotland is still tighter than in the UK, consistent with regional data on job vacancies and worker shortages. This, it suggests, implies faster earnings growth in Scotland compared to the UK in 2025-26. In addition, it expects âthe extra demand from the fiscal expansion will have a greater effect on earnings in Scotland, providing a small additional boost to Scottish earnings growth in 2025-26â.1
Overall funding for the Scottish Budget 2025-26 is ÂŁ58,772m, a real terms increase of 2.1% on 2024-25 (ABR figures). Resource funding is forecast to be ÂŁ51,429m in 2025-26, a real terms increase of 0.8%, and capital funding in 2025-26 is forecast to be ÂŁ7,344m, a 12% increase in real terms. The Scottish Government plans to borrow the maximum amount possible in 2025-26 of ÂŁ472m (under the fiscal framework), and use ÂŁ326m of ScotWindi proceeds to support capital investment on green projects for the first time.3
While UK Government capital spending is set to rise in the next two years before flattening off at a higher level, Scottish Government capital funding peaks in 2025-26 before falling in 2026-27 and then broadly staying flat. However, in 2029-30 capital funding will still be lower than in 2022-23. The SFC explains that this is because in 2026-27 the Scottish Government intends to borrow less than in the previous year and has no plans to use ScotWind proceeds.1
The Cabinet Secretary for Finance and Local Government states in her Foreword to the Scottish Budget 2025-26 that âthis is a Budget by Scotland, for Scotlandâ and decisions are informed by views gathered through widespread engagement, including with opposition members. The Budget focuses on the Governmentâs four priorities of eradicating child poverty, growing the economy, tackling the climate emergency, and ensuring high-quality and sustainable public services. The Foreword indicates that the Scottish Government recognises the importance of the economy, and of growth to Scotland, therefore âthe money we commit through this Budget will enable us to make the most of the economic opportunities available to Scotlandâ.1
The Scottish Government has previously committed to focus its activities and spending towards achieving the 11 current national outcomes in the National Performance Framework (NPF)2, however the Committee has in its ongoing scrutiny of the NPF found little evidence of the delivery of national outcomes driving spending decisions. The Scottish Budget 2025-26 continues the approach of the last four years in including information on each portfolioâs âintended contributions to the national outcomesâ, split by primary and secondary national outcomes.1 The SPICe briefing on the Scottish Budget 2025-26 notes that âthis is a useful overview, as far as it goes, [âŚ] however, given the high-level nature of both the outcomes and the portfolios, it is questionable how useful this will be for scrutinyâ.4 The extent to which this exercise was completed as part of budget formulation or added at the end of the process is also unclear.
This Committee and others recently reported to Parliament on the Scottish Governmentâs proposed national outcomes as part of a five-year statutory review. During the debate on these reports on 8 January 2025, the Deputy First Minister advised that âover the next year, we propose to start again with the national performance frameworkâin other words, to look again at every aspect of it in order to develop and implement a stronger and more strategic and impactful framework for Scotlandâ.5 Given the review has only just been announced, we make no recommendations in relation to the NPF in this report.
In our pre-budget 2025-26 report, we expressed significant concerns regarding the Scottish Governmentâs lack of strategic approach to financial planning and repeated delays in publishing key strategy documents looking beyond the financial year. The Scottish Government did not publish a Medium-Term Financial Strategy (MTFS) or multi-year plans in 2024 as intended, and its Infrastructure Investment Plan (IiP) pipeline reset has yet to materialise despite an original publication date of December 2023.
In August 2024, the Cabinet Secretary set out her intention â[âŚ] to publish a full MTFS in good time ahead of Budget 2026-27; recognising the precise timing will depend on the timing of the UKâs multi-year spending reviewâ.i1 In late October 2024, the Scottish Government also committed to publishing alongside the next MTFS a five-year Fiscal Sustainability Delivery Plan (FSDP) 2 , which is intended to provide clarity and transparency on progress on delivery against the objectives set out in the MTFS, including on public service reform.
The Auditor General for Scotland (AGS) noted during evidence the âcrossoverâ and âoverlapâ between the findings in Audit Scotlandâs November 2024 report on fiscal sustainability and reform in Scotland3 and those set out in the Committeeâs pre-budget 2025-26 report4. For example, Audit Scotland also âfound that the Scottish Government continues to take short-term decisions about how public money is spent and that it has not yet been sufficiently transparent with either the Parliament or the public about the current fiscal situationâ.3
In his news release accompanying this report, the AGS further suggested that the absence of the MTFS and IiP pipeline reset âmakes scrutiny of the current uncertain financial situation more difficultâ.6 Asked by the Committee whether a Finance Bill is needed to improve budget scrutiny, the AGS argued that âwe should be achieving better scrutiny through better provision of information and data to both the SFC and the Committee, as well as to us for audit purposes, to support that scrutinyâ. He added âmy sense is that that could be overcome without legislation being necessaryâ.7
The SFC also suggested in evidence that âthere is much more that we could do around the long-term planning for spending ⌠it would be unfortunate to wait for the exact numbers from the spending review and almost take them as a budget allocation and set budgets for three years on the back of thatâ. It added that âthere is a window of opportunity to take a step back and consider what we are spending money on, what our overall likely funding envelope is, and how we start to make potential changes within thatâ. The spending review will, it noted, âgive us rough changes, but, more broadly, the conversation about the totality of the existing money that we are spending does not need to wait for the spending reviewâ.8
The Cabinet Secretary told the Committee that the FSDP will provide transparency around the various activities happening in Government âand set it all out in one placeâ. Asked whether it would outline a broader approach to the longer-term delivery and shape of public services in the FSDP, she responded âI will set out as much detail as I canâ.9
Our pre-budget 2025-26 report welcomed the First Ministerâs intention to provide âmore concrete actions and fewer strategy documentsâ. In light of the Scottish Governmentâs announcement to produce an additional strategy document (the FSDP), along with learning from Estonia where government strategy documents have been rationalised to 17, we previously asked for a progress update, including any reduction in numbers achieved.4 The Scottish Government responded that âthere is no central information held on reporting of the number of strategy documents, as decisions of this nature are made by individual Cabinet Secretariesâ.11
Our report sets out a number of areas that we consider have not been adequately addressed by the Scottish Government in its response to our pre-budget 2025-26 report. The Committee should not be in the position of having to repeat and reiterate some recommendations before they are clearly responded to. The quality of future Government responses to our reports must improve and the outstanding issues in our pre-budget report be addressed.
One area where the Committee has repeatedly expressed concerns is the extended delays in publishing key strategic financial documents. We consider this to be indicative of a wider problem where vital medium- and longer-term financial planning within the Scottish Government is lacking.
The certainty of regular UK spending reviews and one autumn fiscal event each year provides a welcome opportunity for the Scottish Government to demonstrate its commitment to a more strategic approach to financial planning in future.
The Committee therefore shares the view of the Scottish Fiscal Commission that the Scottish Government should not wait until the UK spending review is published before starting to work on its own spending review. We seek details of, and a timetable for, the work the Scottish Government is currently carrying out in preparation for a Scottish spending review and repeat our request that it considers taking a âzero-based budgeting approachâ, learning lessons from Estonia.
The Committee requests clarification from the Scottish Government regarding when it will publish the framework document setting out âthe economic and political context, the criteria which will govern the assessment of budgets and the process and timetable for its spending reviewâ, as required under the Budget Process Agreement. This timetable must allow time for full Parliamentary scrutiny and the opportunity for committees, external bodies and the public to input to and influence both the approach to, and outcomes of, the Scottish spending review.
In addition, the Committee seeks assurances from the Scottish Government that it will publish its Medium-Term Financial Strategy (MTFS) no later than May 2025 to support pre-budget scrutiny. Given its purpose is to provide broad projections and scenario plans, it is our firm view that the MTFS need not wait until the outcomes of the Scottish spending review and, indeed, with no MTFS since May 2023, details of the Scottish Governmentâs medium-term approach are now urgent.
We request further details of the overall purpose of the new Fiscal Sustainability Delivery Plan (FSDP) and how this sits within the overall suite of financial documents recommended by the Budget Process Review Group in 2017. It would be useful to know, for example, whether the FSDP will follow the approach taken by the SFC in its 2023 fiscal sustainability report of covering a 50-year horizon.
The Committee is disappointed that âthere is no central information held on reporting of the number of strategy documentsâ within the Scottish Government. We therefore ask that it conducts an exercise across portfolios to identify the number of âliveâ strategies it has in place, to provide a baseline for numbers to be monitored and reduced wherever possible. We request that the Scottish Government reports back to the Committee on the outcomes of this exercise by the end of June 2025.
The Committee appreciated the opportunity for early discussions with the Scottish Government in relation to the overall timetable for publication and scrutiny of the Scottish Budget 2025-26. Given the UK Governmentâs commitment to holding one autumn fiscal event each year, we ask that a similar engagement approach is taken in future years with a view to enabling any additional time to be shared between the Scottish Government and Scottish Fiscal Commission for developing budgetary proposals and forecasts, and for Parliamentary scrutiny.
The Committee previously recommended that the Scottish Government should adopt a similar approach to that of the UK Government and the SFC in comparing its budget plans for spending with latest estimates or outturns of spending in the previous year. This recommendation was accepted by the Scottish Government and, last year, it published this data as a standalone document in January 2024. The Committee requested that in future years this information is published alongside the Scottish Budget to support transparency and maximise opportunities for Parliamentary scrutiny.1
This year, the data is included within the Scottish Budget document itself, which the SFC describes as âa presentational improvement [⌠and] should allow a more up-to-date comparison to be made between future plans and the latest information for the current financial yearâ.2 However, while some internal transfers typically made during the financial year have been baselined in the Scottish Budget, it is expected that others such as grants from the health portfolio to local government for social care will continue to be made in year.
In its Scottish Budget 2025-26: initial reaction publication, SPICe highlights that this approach, âwhile well-meaning to reflect the emergency budget review, [âŚ] has had the effect of distorting some budget lines as portfolio budgets for 2025-26 have not been adjusted to reflect certain in-year transfers that are known to take place each year [âŚ]â. This, it argues, âhas had the effect of making the increase in health artificially high and the change in local government artificially lowâ.3
The Committee had previously asked the Scottish Government to baseline routine in-year transfers within the Scottish Budget to support scrutiny and transparency. Asked if the Scottish Government plans to action this request in future years, the Cabinet Secretary responded that âwe have tried to set out the funding in as transparent a way as possible, but there are good reasons that make a lot of sense for in-year transfersâ where the policy sits in one portfolio and delivery sits in another. She went on to say that âif there is more that we can do in that space, we will do itâ.4
Committee Members have also previously requested consistency in the presentation of public-private partnership payments across all portfolios in the budget document. Asked therefore why this information is not included in this yearâs Budget, the Cabinet Secretary reiterated that âif there are any improvements we can make, whether on public-private partnership costs or anything else, I am happy to do thatâ. Pressed on the issue, she said she âwill pick that upâ.4
The Committee welcomes the continuing improvements made to enhance the transparency of budgetary information. We ask that the Scottish Government builds on this work by ensuring that routine in-year transfers made each year are baselined into the Scottish Budget and that public-private partnership costs are consistently presented across portfolio areas.
The Scotland Reserve allows the transfer of funding between financial years up to a limit of ÂŁ734m in 2025-26, which rises in line with inflation. The SFC notes that in 2023-24 underspends were added to the Reserve, which the Scottish Government plans to use in full to support the funding position in 2024-25. Currently, there are no underspends in 2024-25 and therefore the Scotland Reserve âis assumed to remain emptyâ.1
The fiscal framework (as updated in 2023i) enables the Scottish Government to borrow up to ÂŁ472m in 2025-26 for capital expenditure, within an overall limit of ÂŁ3,144.5m. It also provides for resource borrowing of up to ÂŁ600m each year within an overall limit of ÂŁ1,750m, for in-year cash management and forecast errors.2
The Scottish Government plans to borrow up to the maximum of ÂŁ472m in 2025-26 for capital investment, reducing to ÂŁ300m in subsequent years of the forecast period (until 2029-30). The SFC however noted during evidence that â[âŚ] when the Government sets out its budget, it plans to borrow the maximum or quite near the maximum [⌠and] then, as the financial year goes on and perhaps not all the capital money is spent, it reduces those borrowing plans through the yearâ.3
In total, capital borrowing is set to rise to ÂŁ2,735m by the end of 2025-26, reaching 87% of the cumulative cap. This increases to 93% in 2029-30. The Scottish Government has stated that it will ensure at least ÂŁ1,500m can be borrowed over the next Parliamentary term.4
In 2025-26, there is a positive reconciliation of ÂŁ500m which means there is no need for the Scottish Government to access resource borrowing for forecast error.ii However, based on SFC and OBR forecasts, there is potential for a negative reconciliation of ÂŁ701m to be applied to the 2027-28 Budget which would, if it materialises, reduce resource funding that year as the projected reconciliation is larger than the forecast borrowing limit of up to ÂŁ654m. This raises questions around the adequacy of resource borrowing limits for forecast error as currently set out in the fiscal framework.
The Scottish Government has to date used the National Loans Fund (NFL) for its borrowing. However, it announced in late 2023 that it is considering options for issuing bonds, with further information to be published in 2025-26.5 The SFC has indicated that âwhen the Scottish Government publishes its MTFS in spring 2025, we will be looking for clarity on its borrowing plans over the five years of the MTFS, including both the sources and costs of borrowingâ.1
During evidence, the Cabinet Secretary explained that the Scottish Government has completed an initial phase of due diligence regarding the issuing of bonds, and that she will update Parliament on the next phase of this work during the financial year. She recognised that the information provided to date âis quite high levelâ, and Scottish Government officials offered to âconsider what [information] can be put in the public domain at the end of the next phaseâ to assist transparency and scrutiny.7
The Scottish Government is asked to include in the 2025 Medium-Term Financial Strategy detailed scenario planning for capital and resource borrowing. This should include details of how it will approach future negative reconciliations which exceed annual borrowing limits, given ongoing financial pressures and forecasts for a ÂŁ701m negative reconciliation to the 2027-28 budget.
We seek the Scottish Governmentâs assurances that it will update the Committee on progress after each phase of its due diligence process in relation to the issuing of bonds. This is crucial to ensure that any future decisions on this matter can be scrutinised effectively.
The Scottish Government published Scotlandâs Tax Strategy: Building on our Tax Principles1 (the Tax Strategy) alongside the Scottish Budget 2025-26 on 4 December 2024. The Tax Strategy is intended to expand on the Scottish Governmentâs Framework for Tax 20212 and sets out the Scottish Governmentâs approach to tax over the medium term across the devolved and local tax system. The Committee had planned to hold a dedicated evidence session in relation to the Tax Strategy but this was cancelled due to the unavailability of witnesses.
The Scottish Government explains that the Tax Strategy was informed by engagement with stakeholders, including businesses, think tanks, academics, civic society groups and tax professionals. It also undertook a pre-budget engagement event with stakeholders, the outcomes of which are summarised in the document Scottish Budget 2025 to 2026: Public Attitudes to Tax3, which was also published alongside the Budget document in December. Our pre-budget report expressed our disappointment that the Scottish Government had not, as originally intended, first published a draft Tax Strategy for consultation.4
According to the Foreword, the Tax Strategy is intended to set out âthe steps that will underpin this governmentâs approach to developing tax policy; ensure the tax system raises the revenue needed to achieve our priorities; and support our growing economyâ. It also sets out the Scottish Governmentâs medium-term ambitions for how the tax system will develop to support the delivery of its four key prioritiesi.
Other aims include to increase public understanding of tax, strengthen the Scottish Governmentâs approach to compliance in collaboration with HMRC and Revenue Scotland, and work with administrators to ensure mechanisms for efficient tax collection, including increasing digitalisation of the Scottish tax system.
A number of witnesses, including the AGS, agreed that the introduction of a Tax Strategy is a welcome first step to greater certainty regarding the Scottish Governmentâs future plans and approach to tax.5
The Tax Strategy sets out the Scottish Governmentâs intention not to introduce any new bands or increase the rates of Scottish income tax for the remainder of the Parliamentary session. It argues this signals âa period of stability for our largest source of tax revenue [⌠which] will allow us to assess the impacts of recent policy changes, and support the conditions needed for a growing economyâ.1
During evidence-taking, the Cabinet Secretary said, âwe know that we can go only so far at a time when household budgets are still under some constraint, so, in the light of all that, we made the decision that what was most important for the rest of this Parliamentary session was some stability and certainty.â2
The Cabinet Secretary was asked whether the Scottish Governmentâs decision not to introduce any new bands or increase the rates of Scottish Income Tax for the remainder of the Parliamentary session could mean that tax revenues may be insufficient to pay for the services the Scottish Government wishes to provide. Responding, the Cabinet Secretary said that the Tax Strategy considers whether there is scope for the Scottish Government to take on additional tax powers through agreement with the UK Government, however this will not happen in the short term and, as a result, will not raise revenue in this Parliamentary session. She pointed to actions other than taxation that would offer opportunities to create the headroom to ensure that our resources are spent on our prioritiesâ, such as workforce, public service reform, prioritisation of frontline services, the public sector landscape and support for back-room functions.2
The Tax Strategy sets out commitments in relation to local taxes, including working in partnership with local government âto ensure that local taxes are fair and sustainable and to explore the creation of more revenue generating powers for local authoritiesâ.1The Tax Strategy does not however include any plans for council tax reform, an issue which is explored in more detail later in this report.
The Tax Strategy also indicates that the Scottish Government willâ
drive forward a renewed focus on expanding the tax base and tax revenues by progressing specific economic activities with the potential to grow the economy and get more people into work,
undertake specific actions to achieve this, including measures to maximise the potential of Scotlandâs workforce, provision of employability support, and continuing to deliver Scotlandâs Migration Service,
broaden its understanding on how the competitiveness and attractiveness of Scotlandâs economy is impacted by the tax environment, and
support a âmore productive and competitiveâ economy and, as a result, grow Scotlandâs tax base.1
In evidence, Scottish Financial Enterprise (SFE) noted tax as a significant factor in making Scotland an attractive place to do business, work and live and therefore, the tax landscape needs to be competitive. It went on to argue that âthe focus needs to be on increasing the size of the tax base [⌠and] the tax system is part of itâ. SFE therefore welcomed the Scottish Governmentâs decision to make no further changes to income tax in this Parliamentary session.6
SFE also supports the commitment in the Tax Strategy to engage with business to understand the behavioural changes resulting from the current tax approach.6 The Scottish Government will formally evaluate the behavioural impact of changes to income tax in 2023-24 and 2024-25 once outturn data is available, as part of enhancing the evidence base to âinform tax policymaking and support evaluation of tax changesâ. It also plans to publish Areas of Research Interests on tax with available exploratory funding to support their development and to develop a regular programme of appraisal and evaluation across the Scottish tax system.1
A detailed programme of work on future priorities is to be published alongside the 2025 MTFS and an update on progress against the Tax Strategy in early 2026.
The Committee considers the production of a Tax Strategy by the Scottish Government to be a welcome first step in providing clarity regarding the overall approach to taxation in Scotland. As it was not possible to gather detailed evidence on the Strategy during budget scrutiny, we plan to continue to examine it as part of our ongoing financial scrutiny.
Our initial observations are that the Strategy should have included the Scottish Governmentâs plans for council tax reform, given this is long overdue.
As the Scottish Government is aware, we are strongly of the view that more detailed research is needed on behavioural responses to tax policy. The Tax Strategyâs focus on building an evidence base, including on behavioural responses, to inform future decision-making on tax policy is therefore welcome. We look forward to receiving further details alongside the 2025 MTFS.
The Committee reiterates its view that VAT assignment would be of no benefit to the Scottish Budget and would be both expensive to administer and potentially confusing to those expected to pay it.
The Scottish Government states in the budget document that its âpolicy decisions at this budget will continue to deliver our progressive approach in Scotland, while raising substantial revenue to support the delivery of our public servicesâ, adding âthis means we are asking those with the broadest shoulders to contribute moreâ.1
The SFC forecasts that, after taking account of behavioural changes, the combined effect of all the Scottish Governmentâs tax policies amount to an extra ÂŁ54m in 2025-26 and that devolved taxesi will raise a total of almost ÂŁ24.6bn in revenues in 2025-26.2 Table 1 below provides a breakdown of revenues that each of the devolved taxes is expected to raise in 2025-26 and further details of each, including forecast behavioural impacts, is provided in the following sections of this report.
| Tax | Amount |
|---|---|
| NSND Income Tax | ÂŁ20,477łž |
| Non-Domestic Rates | ÂŁ3,052łž |
| Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) | ÂŁ1,019łž |
| Scottish Landfill Tax | ÂŁ40łž |
| SFC Tax Forecast 2025-26 | ÂŁ24,588łž |
Source: Scottish Government Budget 2025-26
Scotlandâs income tax system has six bands: a starter rate, basic rate, intermediate rate, higher rate, advanced rate, and top rate. As noted earlier in this report, the Scottish Government has committed not to increase the number of bands, or rates, of Scottish income tax for the remainder of this Parliamentary sessioni, which the Cabinet Secretary explained to the Committee is âin order to give stability to taxpayersâ.1 The SFC forecasts that, in 2025-26, the freezing of the top three tax bands will add ÂŁ76m in revenues, rising to ÂŁ244m by 2029-30. It estimates that the behavioural response reduces the overall yield of this policy by ÂŁ10m in 2025-26, reaching ÂŁ31m by the end of the forecast period.2
The Scottish Government also plans to increase the basic and intermediate thresholds for income tax in 2025-26. The table below sets out the proposed Scottish tax bands and thresholds for 2025-26.
| Band | Taxable Income | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Starter rate | ÂŁ12,571* - ÂŁ15,397 | 19% |
| Basic rate | ÂŁ15,398 - ÂŁ27,491 | 20% |
| Intermediate rate | ÂŁ27,492 - ÂŁ43,662 | 21% |
| Higher rate | ÂŁ43,663 - ÂŁ75,000 | 42% |
| Advanced rate** | ÂŁ75,001 - ÂŁ125,140 | 45% |
| Top rate** | Over ÂŁ125,140 | 48* |
* Assumes individuals are in receipt of the standard UK personal allowance (ÂŁ12,570 in 2025-26). The personal allowance is reserved and set by the UK government.
** Those earning more than ÂŁ100,000 will see their personal allowance reduced by ÂŁ1 for every ÂŁ2 earned over ÂŁ100,000. This policy is reserved to the UK government.
Note that Scottish income tax only applies to non-savings non-dividend (NSND) income.
The SFC forecasts that these âabove inflationâ increases to thresholds will lower revenue by ÂŁ24m in 2025-26, and that there is a minimal expected behavioural response from the policy.2 Asked why the Scottish Government did not also increase higher rate tax thresholds, the Cabinet Secretary explained that unfreezing these thresholds âwould not have left money for investments in health, education, the winter fuel payment and so onâ.1
The SFC states that income tax policy decisions taken together will raise additional revenue of ÂŁ52m in 2025-26. It further estimates that âbecause of decisions on Scottish tax rates and thresholds, an additional ÂŁ1,676m income tax will be raised in 2025-26 than would be the case if tax rates and thresholds from the rest of the UK were applied in Scotlandâ. However, it explains that the income tax net position is expected to be ÂŁ838m, largely because of slower economic growth in Scotland since income tax was devolved. It notes, therefore, in return for Scottish income taxpayers paying ÂŁ1,676m more in income tax, the Scottish Budget is only benefitting by ÂŁ838m. The SFC describes this as an âeconomic performance gapâ.2
During evidence, the Cabinet Secretary highlighted âsome very positive signsâ in the Scottish economy, including higher productivity growth in Scotland than in the rest of the UK, GDP per capita growing faster in Scotland since 2007, higher levels of inward investment, and strong growth in key sectors of the economy. She went on to say, âthat is not to minimise the OBRâs point about relative stronger growth [⌠in the UK], but the underlying Scottish economy has improved markedly, and it is important to recognise thatâ.1
Given the limited and closed review which took place in 2023, the Cabinet Secretary was asked if she is aware of any appetite within the UK Government for a wider review of the fiscal framework which could consider issues such as adjustments based on relative growth with the rest of the UK. Responding, the Cabinet Secretary said, âwe absolutely want there to be a more ambitious review of the fiscal framework, but despite our communication with the Treasury being better, I do not get the sense that it is keen to have a fundamental look at the frameworkâ. She said she would continue to pursue the issue.1
The SFC explained to the Committee that âwe are not suggesting that we are likely to see significant behavioural effects this year, because of the freezing of the bands, compared with what has happened in the past. It went on to say, âwe think behavioural change is likely to be much more significant among people in the top tax rate, largely because they will have more opportunities to change their earningsâthey are perhaps not in traditional salaried jobsâand because they will probably have the most discretion to change their behaviour, to move around and so onâ.8
Asked how it measures the wider behavioural impacts arising from cumulative tax policy decisions, the SFC said that âone of the problems with trying to assess the cumulative effects of all the policy changes is that, once the changes are made and people respond to them, we use the tax revenues that emerge as the baseline for our future forecastsâ. Therefore, [âŚ] it is hard to work out retrospectively how much of that baseline is attributable to actual behavioural effectsâ.8
The Committee shares the Scottish Governmentâs view that there would be merit in carrying out a wider review of how the fiscal framework is operating, including how adjustments based on relative growth with the rest of the UK impact on income tax revenues in Scotland.
We also set out in this report recommendations which we consider would help to support growth in earnings and revenues in Scotland.
Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) is applied to purchases of residential and non-residential land and buildings, as well as commercial leases. The Scottish Budget 2025-26 maintains residential and non-residential rates and bands of LBTT at current levelsi, while continuing first-time buyer reliefs. Additional Dwelling Supplement (ADS) rates were increased from 6 to 8% from 5 December 2024ii, which the SFC forecasts will raise ÂŁ32m in additional revenue in 2025-26. The Scottish Budget 2025-26 states that âthe increased rate also supports the Scottish Governmentâs commitment to protect opportunities for first-time buyers in Scotlandâ.1
In total, LBTT is forecast to raise ÂŁ1,019łž in 2025-26. During evidence, Scottish Financial Enterprise (SFE) highlighted that LBTT should be considered in the context of Scotlandâs attractiveness to business and individuals, given costs in higher bands can be significantly higher than in England.2 The Scottish Government has committed to undertake a review of LBTT over the remainder of this Parliament, starting in Spring 2025, to ensure that the policy intentions of LBTT continue to be met.1
Scottish Landfill Tax (SLfT) applies to the disposal of waste to landfill and is intended to incentivise behaviours to reduce overall waste and increase recycling. The Budget increases Scottish Landfill Tax (SLfT) rates in line with those in the rest of the UK, from ÂŁ103.70 to ÂŁ126.15 per tonne for the standard rate, and from ÂŁ3.30 to ÂŁ4.05 per tonne for the lower rate. Revenues from SLfT are forecast to reduce after the biodegradable municipal waste ban is introduced at the end of 2025, from ÂŁ54m in 2024-25 to ÂŁ40łž in 2025-26.
The Scottish Government plans to commission independent research on the ongoing effectiveness of the lower rate of SLfT in supporting its circular economy and waste objectives, which is to be used to support future budget decisions.1
The Scottish Budget 2025-26 further sets out that the Scottish Government intends to introduce legislation in 2025-26 to establish a Building Safety Levy in Scotland, which would be equivalent to a levy that the UK Government intends to introduce in England and will raise revenues for the Scottish Governmentâs cladding remediation programme. It also outlines plans to explore a potential Cruise Ship Levyiii and consider options for a Carbon Land Taxiv. A Scottish Aggregates Tax, approved by Parliament in 2024, will come into effect from 1 April 2026.1
The Committee looks forward to receiving updates on progress with the Scottish Governmentâs consideration of a possible new Carbon Land Tax and Cruise Ship Levy, and on its review of Land and Buildings Transaction Tax. We also seek confirmation of the timetable for introducing a Bill to create a Building Safety Levy in Scotland.
Non-Domestic Rates (NDR) is a property tax which helps pay for local council services and is set by the Scottish Government. Policy changes include freezing the basic property rate, which is charged to properties with a rateable value up to and including ÂŁ51,000, at 49.8p, and extending hospitality reliefs. This includes maintaining the 100% relief for hospitality premises on islands, which was introduced in 2024-25, along with a new 40% relief, which will be available for âthe 92% of hospitality premises liable for the basic property rate, capped at ÂŁ110,000 per businessâ, as well as for grassroots music venues with a capacity of below 1,500.1 The SFC estimates that this new 40% relief will cost ÂŁ22m in 2025-26, in addition to the ÂŁ5m cost of hospitality relief for the islands.2
The Cabinet Secretary suggested to the Committee that the Scottish Governmentâs approach is âbalancedâ and âin the light of competing priorities and the need to have a balanced and fair budget, we have done what we can to support as many hospitality premises as we can in a way that is affordableâ. She added that âgoing further would have meant that we could not spend money on winter fuel payments, for exampleâ.3
Asked about the Scottish Governmentâs plans to introduce a public health levy as part of NDR, the Cabinet Secretary argued that â[âŚ] for the foreseeable future, it is definitely not the right timeâ to do so â[âŚ,] primarily because of the pressures of the increase in employer national insurance contributionsâ. She added that the Scottish retail sector has âvery much welcomedâ this approach.3
The Scottish Government announced that there will be no freeze or cap on council tax increases in 2025-26i. The Cabinet Secretary has suggested that âwith record funding [for local government], there is no reason for big increases in council tax next yearâ.1However, in its Budget 2025-26 briefing, SPICe highlights a recent survey by the Local Government Information Unit (published pre-budget) which shows that around a fifth of local authorities are considering increasing council tax by at least 10% next year.2
The Scottish Budget 2025-26 is silent on council tax reform, an issue which has been raised repeatedly by witnesses to this Committee. Indeed, our pre-budget 2025-26 report asked the Scottish Government to set out, following the Cabinet Secretaryâs suggestion that cross-party consensus will be required to make progress with council tax reform, âhow it will create the space for discussions and consensus-building in this Parliamentary sessionâ.3 Responding, the Scottish Government stated that âthe Joint Working Group is looking at processes to build a consensus around meaningful changes to council taxâ and that it is in agreement that consensus is necessary to enable progress.4
Asked to clarify what the Government would like to achieve in the remainder of this Parliamentary session with regards to council tax reform, the Cabinet Secretary responded that âthere is not going to be time for practical work to drive that forward, beyond the work that is already in trainâ, adding âit is about seeing whether there is scope for cross-party consensus on some change that could hit the ground running in the early part of the next sessionâ.5
The Committee repeats our pre-budget 2025-26 recommendation that the Scottish Government sets out âhow it will create the space for discussions and consensus-building in this Parliamentary sessionâ on council tax reform. We note the lack of a clear pathway forward in the Scottish Government's response to this recommendation.
We further welcome the recent decision of the Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee to carry out a short inquiry on council tax reform. We hope that this work will provide the impetus for Government leadership to make real progress on this important issue.
While public sector employers are expected to be compensated by HM Treasury for higher costs resulting from the UK Governmentâs decision to increase employer NICs, it has yet to be confirmed what level of compensation will apply to Scotland, which has a larger proportion of its working population employed in the public sector than in England. The Scottish Government estimates that the policy will cost between ÂŁ520m and ÂŁ580m in 2025-26 for directly employed public sector employees in Scotlandâs devolved public sector, with a central estimate of ÂŁ550m. Barnett consequentials for the policy are expected be around ÂŁ300m.1
SFC Forecasts highlight a âfiscal riskâ arising from the uncertainty around the funding and spending implications of the employer NICs increase, âleaving it for the 2025-26 Autumn Budget Revisionâ, and a potential gap between the cost and how much funding the Scottish Government receives. More broadly, it suggests that âthe combined risks for the Budget from pay deals, size of workforce and [employer] NICs are significant and may be difficult to manageâ.2 The SFC has recognised that this uncertainty around the level of compensation for the [employer] NICs increase â[âŚ] puts the Government in quite a challenging positionâ in terms of budgetary planning across portfolios.3
As at 14 January 2025, the Cabinet Secretary was still waiting for a response to her letter to HM Treasury in which she âput forward the case that the full cost for the public sector is more than ÂŁ500mâ and âif we include areas [⌠such as] universities and social care and so onâthat takes the figure up to more than ÂŁ700mâ. She added that providing the Barnett share only, â[âŚ] will not be acceptableâ.4
The Committee asks the Scottish Government what specific plans it has in place to meet the expected shortfall in UK funding for increased employer NICs, including the impact on the Scottish Budget were the Scottish Government to provide any additional funding required or on public bodies if they had to absorb some of the costs.
Given the potential impact on the Scottish Budget, we ask the UK Government to discuss such matters with the Scottish Government at an early stage to resolve funding uncertainties arising from significant UK policy announcements.
As noted earlier in this report, the Scottish Government intends to focus resources in the 2025-26 Budget across its four priorities, delivering âalmost ÂŁ64bn of funding in 2025-26 towards these and to ensuring that we continue to protect the policies at the heart of our social contractâi.1 Key spending decisions across the portfolios includeâ
a ârecord investmentâ of ÂŁ21bn in health and social care, including an increase in capital spending of ÂŁ139m from 2024-25, to increase capacity and access to primary care âto shift the balance of care to preventative and community-based support and substantially reduce delayed dischargeâ.
a ârecordâ ÂŁ15bn in funding for local government,
providing ÂŁ768m for affordable homes âenabling over 8000 new properties for social rent, mid-market rent and low-cost home ownership to be built this coming yearâ.
restoring a universal winter heating payment to all pensioners in 2025-26. The SFC estimates this new policy will cost ÂŁ69m more than associated funding from the UK Government in 2025-26,
developing systems necessary to âeffectively scrap the impact of the two-child cap in 2026â,
uprating all benefits in line with September 2024 CPI inflation and investing in a package of benefits and payments only available in Scotland totalling ÂŁ644m in 2025-26. The SFC explains that social security spending is forecast to account for 13.5% of day-to-day spending in 2025-26, ÂŁ1,334m higher than the corresponding funding provided by the UK Governmentii.
allocating ÂŁ25m to increase the number of jobs available in the green energy supply chain,
providing ÂŁ3m for a Bright Start Breakfasts pilot, while continuing to invest in early learning, and
delivering a ÂŁ34m uplift to the culture budget.1
The Budget document also notes that âas a result of the progress made to reach a balanced budget in 2024-25, this total investment will include over ÂŁ300 million of ScotWind revenues in 2025-26 ⌠on a range of projects for longer term benefits for Scotland â to deliver our ambitions to tackle climate change, invest in growing the economy and to create jobs, and to drive forward reformâ. It also confirms that it no longer expects to draw down around ÂŁ424m of ScotWind funding in 2024-25 to meet resource funding demands. This figure has, following the UK Autumn Budget, been reduced to ÂŁ160m.1
A significant and increasing area of spend within the Scottish Budget is on social security expenditure, which in 2025-26 will be uprated in line with inflation. As the SPICe briefing on the Scottish Budget 2025-26 explains, âScottish Government decisions on social security have cumulatively added significant cost pressures to its budgetâ, largely due to its introduction of benefits that are not available in the rest of the UK, such as the Scottish child payment, and spending more on benefits than would have been the case if they had not been devolved.1 The SFC notes in its Forecasts that social security payments in 2025-26 will cost ÂŁ1,334m more than if welfare payments remained at UK levels, rising to ÂŁ1,463m in 2029-30.2 The table below sets out the effect of social security spending on the Budget in more detail.
| ÂŁłžžąąôąôžą´Ç˛Ô | 2023-24 outturn | 2024-25 | 2025-26 | 2026-27 | 2027-28 | 2028-29 | 2029-30 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Social security net position [1] | -198 | -263 | -529 | -619 | -616 | -601 | -568 |
| Spending on payment without a BGA, of which: | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank | blank |
| Payments unique to Scotland [2] | -569 | -618 | -644 | -674 | -697 | -713 | -732 |
| Other social security spending [3] | -132 | -162 | -161 | -160 | -161 | -162 | -163 |
| Effect on the Budget | -899 | -1,042 | -1,334 | -1, 453 | -1,475 | -1,476 | -1,463 |
Source: Scottish Fiscal Commission
[1] This includes the disability payments, Carer Support Payment, winter heating payments for adults and Employment Injury Assistance. Detailed information can be found in Figure 5.7.
[2] âPayments unique to Scotlandâ includes Scottish Child Payment, Carerâs Allowance Supplement, Child Winter Heating Payment, Best Start Grant Early Learning Payment, and Best Start Grant School Age Payment. We also include spending through Discretionary Housing Payments on bedroom tax mitigation and the extra costs of the commitment to mitigating Benefit Cap deductions.
[3] âOther social securityâ includes spending on Best Start Grant Pregnancy and Baby Payment, Best Start Foods, Discretionary Housing Payments, Funeral Support Payment, Employability Services, and Scottish Welfare Fund. Funding for these payments comes through the general Block Grant and it is not possible to provide an estimate of funding received for individual payments.
Figures may not sum because of rounding.
Given that this rising social security bill reduces the funding available for other spending priorities within the Scottish Budget, the Committee had previously asked the Scottish Government how it will continue to assess the long-term affordability and sustainability of its social security policies and their impact on other areas of spend.3 The Scottish Government said, in response, that it âwill continue to take a responsible and capable approach to Scotlandâs finances as new budget pressures emergeâ, including âmonitoring all areas of expenditure during the year, prioritising spend, and maximising efficienciesâ.4
As noted in our pre-budget 2025-26 report, we do not consider this to be an adequate response and we therefore repeated our request that the Scottish Government now carries out this full assessment, with outcomes included in the 2025 MTFS and used to inform future budget planning.5 The Scottish Government has since confirmed that it will provide an update on its work on fiscal sustainability in social security in the 2025 MTFS.6
Asked what impact the increase in social security spend is having on the economy and productivity, the SFC said that it broadly has a neutral impact, adding âit comes back to the fact that you are spending ÂŁ1.3bn more on social security than there is funding for, but that means that you are spending less elsewhere, so it does not really change the totalityâ. It goes on to explain that welfare decisions on child poverty, for example, may have an impact on the economy, but not within the SFCâs five-year forecast period.7 The SFC later wrote to the Social Justice and Social Security Committee on 23 January 2025 providing further detail regarding its forecasts for Child Disability Payment.8
The Cabinet Secretary told the Committee that its decision to spend more on social security payments â[âŚ] is about prioritisationâ. She went on to explain that the Scottish Government regards investment in social security âas an investment in people and in anti-poverty measuresâ, adding âgiving children the best start in life means they are more likely to be economically productive later in life, so you could argue that it is an investment in society that will give economic returns laterâ.9
The Committee notes that the Scottish Government intends to provide an update on the fiscal sustainability of social security spend as part of its 2025 MTFS. We ask that this includes details of how the Scottish Government is assessing the effectiveness and outcomes of its approach to the delivery of benefits as well as impacts on other parts of the Budget. We also note the Scottish Fiscal Commission's letter to the Social Justice and Social Security Committee providing further detail in relation to its forecasts for Child Disability Payment.
The Scottish Budget 2025-26 includes a commitment to spend ÂŁ3m on developing systems to deliver mitigation of the UK Governmentâs policy preventing parents from claiming child tax credit or universal credit for more than two children (the so-called two-child limit or cap). This measure, the Scottish Government argues, will lift 15,000 children out of poverty.1
In its December 2024 Forecasts, the SFC said it judges the Scottish Governmentâs policy on mitigating the two-child limit to be a âfiscal riskâ. At that time, no formal costing of the policy had been carried out.2
The SFC later published, on 7 January 2025, a report3 containing its estimate of the cost of mitigating the two-child limit, and the impact this will have on the Scottish Budget, to assist the Committee and Parliament with budget scrutiny of the Scottish Budget. The SFC states that âwe would have liked to include a costing in our [December 2024] Forecasts, but the Scottish Government did not inform us of the policy until 28 November 2024â. This, it notes, âwas very late in the Budget process and a week and a day after the deadline for final policy measuresâ.3 The SFC told the Committee that âthe process we had with the Government up to that final late notice of policy, was exemplaryâ, adding âwe got all the information that we neededâ, with âmodest extensions in a couple of areas where we were in regular dialogue with the Government, but that is entirely fine under the protocolâ.5
The SFCâs Forecasts state that while the Scottish Government has announced that it plans to implement mitigation in 2026, it âwill seek to accelerate the timetable if at all possibleâ.2 The SFCâs policy costings assume that mitigation will be paid from April 2026, with full-year costs for 2026-27.3 The SFC forecasts that, assuming the Scottish Government implements this policy for all affected children, the cost would be ÂŁ155m in 2026-27, rising to ÂŁ198m in 2029-30. This increases the SFCâs forecasts of social security spending overall from ÂŁ7.5bn to ÂŁ7.6bn for 2026-27, and from ÂŁ8.8bn to ÂŁ9bn for 2029-30. The SFC goes on to note thatâ
By 2029-30 the additional spending on the proposed mitigation payments would account for 0.3 per cent of the Scottish Governmentâs total resource funding. This would increase the share spent on social security to 14%, with a corresponding reduction in the amount available to fund other public services.3
The table below shows the updated effect of the policy on total social security spending and on the overall Scottish Budget.
| ÂŁłžžąąôąôžą´Ç˛Ô | 2026-27 | 2027-28 | 2028-29 | 2029-30 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost of two-child limit mitigation | 155 | 171 | 184 | 198 |
| Original social security forecast | 7,471 | 7,922 | 8,321 | 8,754 |
| Updated social security forecast | 7,626 | 8,093 | 8,506 | 8,952 |
| Original effect of social security on the Budget [1] | -1,453 | -1,475 | -1,476 | -1,463 |
| Updated effect of social security on the Budget | -1,608 | -1,646 | -1,660 | -1,661 |
Source: Scottish Fiscal Commission
[1] The âeffect on the Budgetâ is the difference between total devolved social security spending and the funding received through social security Block Grant Adjustments.
The SFC anticipates that the proposed mitigation payments would not generate large behavioural responses over and above the ways that families may already have adapted to the Scottish child payment. It further notes that ârecent Scottish Government analysis did not find evidence of a large labour market response to the introduction and expansion of Scottish child payment in recent yearsâ.3
The Cabinet Secretary advised the Committee âwe think that lifting the two-child cap will be the most impactful lever on the back of other measures that we have taken, such as the Scottish child payment, free school meals and so on, to help lift some of the poorest families out of povertyâ. Asked about the impact of the policy on incentivising people back into work, she responded that âwork is absolutely the best route out of povertyâ and âa lot of work is going on to support the families you might describe as furthest from the labour market in order to break the cycle of poverty, and work is the best way to do thatâ. The Cabinet Secretary agreed to provide the Committee with the Scottish Governmentâs options appraisal setting out why it chose this specific model for mitigating the two-child cap rather than others available.10
Asked about the Scottish Governmentâs late notification of the policy to the SFC, the Cabinet Secretary explained that âas we worked through the shape of the budget, the First Minister felt, bluntly, that we were not going as far as we needed to go on tackling child poverty [⌠and] challenged us to look again at what more could be doneâ. She said she had apologised to the SFC for late notice of the policy, adding âif I had been asking the SFC to cost that for implementation in 2025-26, there would have been a pretty significant issue [âŚ,] however, given that the costings are for 2026-27, the SFC has been able to provide the costs in good time for the final stages of the budget in Februaryâ.10
The First Minister has since confirmed that, if the development of systems can be safely put in place in 2025-26, the first payments would be made in that year, rather than in 2026-27.12
The Committee notes that the Scottish Fiscal Commission (SFC), up until late notification of the two-child limit policy, had found engagement and information-sharing with the Scottish Government to be âexemplaryâ. While these signs of improvement are welcome, it is crucial that significant policies are notified to the SFC in time for full costings to be included in budget forecasts. Failure to do so presents significant risks to the affordability and sustainability of the Scottish Budget.
We note the First Ministerâs announcement that the first payments for mitigating the two-child limit could be made as early as within the 2025-26 financial year if systems are in place. Given the Scottish Government has not included any funding in the 2025-26 Budget to cover these payments, the Committee asks for details of where this funding will be found as well as potential impacts on other areas of spend.
The Committee welcomes the Cabinet Secretaryâs commitment to provide a copy of the options appraisal setting out why it chose this specific model for mitigating the two-child cap and looks forward to considering this in due course.
Another significant area of spend in the Scottish Budget is on public sector pay, which now amounts to over half of resource spending. The Scottish Government published its Public Sector Pay Policy 2025-261 alongside the Scottish Budget 2025-26 in December 2024, the first time the two documents have been published together in four years2. The 2025-26 Policy provides âpay metrics that are fair, sustainable and realistic within a multi-year pay envelope of 9% over 2025-26, 2026-27 and 2027-28 set against an expected inflation forecast of 7%, ensuring a level of pay restorationâ. Flexibility is being provided for employers to configure three-year proposals within the 9% pay envelope, âprovided they have a fiscally sustainable approachâ. Any employer that does not agree a three-year pay deal will be restricted to a maximum 3% pay uplift for 2025-26.1
In its December 2024 Forecasts, the SFC states that âalthough the Scottish Government has been clearer this year in setting out its pay policy, risks remain that pay bill growth may be larger than planned either as a result of pay pressures or workforce changesâ. It went on to say that the size of the workforce is also âan important lever to manage the pay billâ and that the Scottish Government has indicated that it will set out further detail on what this means for the public sector in Scotland as part of its FSDP, published alongside the MTFS.4
In addition to the 3% basic pay award, the SFC has assumed that âthe other factors such as pay progression add, based on historical data, an additional 1.5 percentage points to average pay growth, summing to 4.5% average pay growth in total in 2025-26â. It goes on to say that âwhile there have been improvements in the information provided by the Scottish Government, there is still a need for greater clarity and monitoring of pay costs and workforce plans in the Scottish Budgetâ.4
The SFC expanded on this point in evidence, stating that âthere is a need to be more transparent about saying what the total public sector pay bill, including workforce, is and that, if we provide more for public sector pay, that has implications for the workforce or for servicesâ.6
The AGS also referred to âa phrase that the Government has used a number of times is that its ambition is to âright-sizeâ the workforceâ, adding that âit is still unclear to me where the Government intends to get to with its workforceâ. He also said he would like to see more detail from the Scottish Government on the shape and size of Scotlandâs wider public sector workforce it envisages, âso that it can both deliver effective public services that support the delivery of its intended outcomes and manage its financial positionâ. He went on to say, âwe want to see absolute clarity from the Government on its workforce intentions, on compulsory redundancy, voluntary redundancy or redeployment, and which tools it intends to use and whenâ.7
The AGS further highlighted that in some sectors, such as colleges, redundancies are already being used as a means of âbalancing their booksâ. The Committee also heard from some public sector bodies that they would like to see more flexibility around the policy of no compulsory redundancies.7
Asked why pay progression is not factored into the Pay Policy, the Cabinet Secretary advised that it has been assumed that public bodies and organisations will absorb the costs of pay progression within their budgets. She added, âI note that deficiencies, head count, reform and doing things differently are all part of the way that organisations are expected to manage their pay billsâ. She also confirmed that the Scottish Government aims to reduce the civil service workforce through recruitment controls and provided an example of having reduced its temporary workforce by around 40% as a first step.9
The Committee welcomes the Scottish Governmentâs return to publishing its Public Sector Pay Policy alongside the Scottish Budget, which we consider is important for transparency and scrutiny especially given over half of resource funding is now spent on pay.
The Committee asks the Scottish Government to respond to the views of the Scottish Fiscal Commission and Auditor General for Scotland that greater clarity is needed around how workforce plans and pay progression fits within the overall public sector pay bill.
We also seek further details of the Scottish Governmentâs ambition to âright sizeâ the civil service workforce, including the target operating model it is working to, a timetable for this work, and how it will minimise any impacts of having a smaller workforce on policy delivery and implementation.
The Committee has a continuing interest in how the Scottish Government targets its spending towards growing the economy, including through innovation, productivity, and infrastructure, and the consequential impact on income tax revenues. Growing the economy is also one of the Scottish Governmentâs four key priorities and, as such, is included as a section within the Scottish Budget 2025-26, which states âthis is a Budget that will set us up to prosper over these coming years, with public money used to support and encourage higher levels of private investment in key sectors, including energyâ. The Scottish Government adds, âwe are backing entrepreneurs and innovators, emerging tech including Artificial Intelligence (AI) and robotics and investing specifically to support growth in local economiesâ.1
It goes on to highlight that its investment in offshore wind in 2025-26 of up to ÂŁ500m is expected to leverage ÂŁ1.5bn in private sector investment, supporting jobs and the delivery of a sustainable supply chain. It further notes that âa stable tax system provides businesses with the confidence to plan and make investment decisions, supporting the conditions needed for a growing economyâ. Specific spending commitments includeâ
providing âa further ÂŁ200m (net) to the Scottish National Investment Bank, to ensure continuation and advancement of work to create jobs, support innovation and attract investmentâ,
investing over ÂŁ7bn in infrastructure, including ÂŁ150m for offshore wind, expanding regeneration funding to ÂŁ62m to invest in communities across Scotland, ÂŁ100m for continued rollout of digital connectivity programmes across Scotland, almost ÂŁ1.1bn for rail services and infrastructure and maintenance of the rail network, over ÂŁ237m investment in maintaining ports, harbours and ferry fleets, and ÂŁ550m investment in safety, maintenance and improvements in the trunk road network,
continuing to invest over ÂŁ2bn in Scotlandâs colleges, universities, and skills development programmes,
providing ÂŁ321m for the enterprise agencies to support Scottish businesses âto start and scale, be more productive, and access finance and attract investmentâ,
providing ÂŁ15m to âexpand support for female entrepreneurs and boost the economic impact of universities and fund the development of business clusters in advanced manufacturing and deeptechâ, and
a ârevitalised multiâmillion Rural Tourism Infrastructure Fundâ.1
As noted earlier in this report, capital funding is around 10% of the Scottish Budget and is forecast to rise by 12% in 2025-26 before falling in 2026-27 and remaining broadly flat for the rest of the forecast period. The SFC told the Committee that it shares the OBRâs view that âthe boost to capital will boost long-term economic performance but that will lie outside the next five yearsâ of the forecast horizon. It went on to say that âsome of the capital investment might not just improve productivity and economic growth; it could also contribute to other objectives, such as those on net zero and on sustainability, which are not necessarily captured by GDP and GDP growthâ.3 Renewables Scotland told the Committee during evidence that âthe investment of ScotWind revenues, [âŚ] could be a strong enabler of that growth agenda, and we are keen to see those resources in particular being plumbed towards that growth opportunities in offshore wind in particularâ.4
Given the importance of capital projects to economic growth, the Committee has continued to press for the Scottish Governmentâs IiP pipeline reset, which was originally expected in December 2023, to be published as early as possible. However, the Scottish Governmentâs position is that âthe reset pipeline is intended to give certainty to the construction sector and other stakeholders on the Governmentâs infrastructure plans and it would not be helpful to publish something ahead of the UK spending review, based on only partial informationâ.5
As with our pre-budget 2025-26 scrutiny, the Committee heard during scrutiny of the Scottish Budget 2025-26 that more should be done to support research and development, recognising the important role that universities play in attracting investment, supporting Scotlandâs world-leading sectors, and building a highly skilled workforce. Indeed, analysis by UK Research and Innovation was highlighted showing that for the University of Strathclydeâs Continuous Manufacturing and Crystallisation work, ÂŁ63 is generated for the wider economy for every ÂŁ1 that is spent on research.1
There was some frustration amongst witnesses from universities regarding the competitive funding model which, they told us, leads to administrative burden, while competitor economies are boosted through âstrategic investment in strategic national manufacturing research infrastructure enabling countries to drive innovation and develop homegrown talentâ. The visibility of new and emerging sectors is also seen as crucial in attracting and promoting career opportunities to the workers of the future, along with more inward investment, and a phased approach to supporting supply chains, SMEs and spinouts to anchor sectors in Scotland. Witnesses also highlighted a shortage of modern buildings suitable for advanced manufacturing and evidence of start-ups and SMEs finding it difficult to secure investment.1 At our visit to the University of Dundee in August 2024 as part of pre-budget scrutiny, Sir Mike Ferguson from the University of Dundee stated that ÂŁ5m for âProof of Conceptâ investment, would generate a return of ÂŁ200m.3
The Cabinet Secretary was asked whether continuing to retain tuition fees at the same level (ÂŁ1820) for 15 years enables universities to be globally competitive. She said that tuition payments would remain under review and pointed to other factors outwith the Scottish Governmentâs responsibility that affect the global competitiveness of the university sector such as the increase in employer NICs and policies around international students. The Cabinet Secretary said she would provide a written response setting out the Scottish Governmentâs vision on how a sustainable higher education sector can be achieved, adding âgoing forward, I am open to looking at what more we can do within the confines of the resources that are available to usâ.4
We also heard that the talent pool in Scotland is attractive and needs to be maintained and improved. Colleges Scotland said âwe need to support industry to help it to expand and in order that Scotland and the economy can make the most of the opportunities, but we are being asked to do that on a falling budget, which has huge impacts. It went on to say that âonly the college sector has the volume, capacity and potential to meet the need, given the percentage of those jobs that involve high-end technical skillsâ, adding âhowever, investment is needed to do thatâ. It also pointed to the need for less bureaucracy around reporting, and fundamental review, and reform of the funding model âin order for it to work for industryâ.1
Scottish Financial Enterprise (SFE) said it would support the college sector having flexibility to be more responsive, highlighting âas an industry we need short sharp interventionsâsay, six months for retraining peopleâ. Renewables Scotland noted that vocational pathways âare absolutely key and, as we have seen in some of the most productive economies in the world, work-based learning options workâ. Dr Alastair McInroy of Technology Scotland also told us that investment in skills âis a big issueâ and is challenging, but âwe must also remember, particularly in our sector, that it is in attractor for inward investment at the moment because the talent pool is as attractive in Scotland as it is anywhere elseâ.1
The Cabinet Secretary recognised that more work is needed to address skills gaps and match skills to the needs of the economy. She also offered to provide further information in writing on the ongoing work to join up the work of Skills Development Scotland and colleges to ensure that the skills needs of employers and the economy are met.3
The Scottish Governmentâs role in investing in infrastructure and projects that will build confidence for the private sector to invest in Scotland was also highlighted by witnesses. Scottish Development International explained that inward investors âwant to see clarity and consistency of policy but also dynamism, and we have that [âŚ] in team Scotlandâ and called for the Scottish Budget to support innovation, internationalisation, and investment. It went on to highlight âthe fact that Scotland is the top destination outside London year on year is a huge feather in our cap, and other businesses see that success and want to follow that routeâ.1
We also heard from SFE that a âgeneral supportive toneâ for business and economic growth as well as a competitive tax system are important in attracting and retaining business in Scotland.1
The Cabinet Secretary highlighted the Scottish Governmentâs investment in wealth-creating areas and business confidence increasing by around 13% according to a recent survey. She also told the Committee that multi-year certainty for capital projects âis the best certainty that we can giveâ but that this is dependent on the outcomes of the UK Spending Review in late Spring.3
The Committee notes the actions set out in the Scottish Governmentâs response to our pre-budget 2025-26 report in relation to growing the economy, including its plans to prioritise funding for research, knowledge exchange and innovation. We also anticipate receiving additional written evidence from the Cabinet Secretary on the sustainability of the higher education sector and on work being carried out to improve the flexibility and responsiveness of the college sector to enable skills to be matched to the needs of business and the economy.
Given analysis by UK Research and Innovation showing that for the University of Strathclydeâs Continuous Manufacturing and Crystallisation work, ÂŁ63 is generated for the wider economy for every ÂŁ1 that is spent on research, the Committee seeks further details of how the Scottish Government is working to maximise the opportunities for universities and high-performing sectors in Scotland to be globally competitive.
We further note the creation of a Cabinet Sub-Committee on Investment and the Economy, chaired by the Deputy First Minister, which aims to âhelp create a business environment that drives investment and growthâ, including by making progress with key opportunities identified in the Green Industrial Strategy. The Committee requests regular updates in relation to progress of, and outcomes from, the Cabinet Sub-Committeeâs new strands of work.
The Committee agrees with the Scottish Fiscal Commission that the significant increase in capital spending in 2025-26 allows the Scottish Government âto restart paused capital projects and make some new commitmentsâ. We therefore remain disappointed that the Scottish Government continues to hold back from publishing its Infrastructure Investment Plan pipeline refresh until after the UK spending review. We strongly urge that it now sets out its priority commitments to ensure it is in the best position to âhit the ground runningâ with infrastructure projects at the start of the next financial year when capital funding is significantly increased.
The Committeeâs pre-budget 2023-24 report published in November 20231 included recommendations arising from our 2023 inquiry into the Scottish Governmentâs Public Service Reform Programme2 and set out our commitment to continue to consider progress with the reform programme as part of pre-budget scrutiny each year thereafter. In response, the Scottish Government committed to providing six-monthly updates on progress with its public service reform programme in May/June and December, to coincide with publication of the MTFS and Scottish Budget.3
Our pre-budget 2025-26 report4expresses our disappointment at receiving the Scottish Governmentâs second full update5 as late as on 23 September 2024 as it limited our ability to fully examine the update. A further update report6 was received by the Committee on 21 December 2024. Again, it would have been helpful to receive this update at an earlier stage of the budget process to enable fuller scrutiny.
The Scottish Budget 2025-26 states that the Scottish Government will focus on âdoubling down on reform and efficiencies across our public sectorâ and that the public service reform programme âis vital to improving outcomes and achieving sustainable public finances in the longer termâ. It highlights that âto do that we will focus on early interventions and prevention, moving our system to working with people and communities, understanding their needs and giving them what they need to thriveâ.7 In his covering letter to the Scottish Governmentâs December 2024 update report, the Minister for Public Finances said he will be âleading the development of a Public Service Reform Strategy and will engage with public sector leaders at a Public Service Reform Summit by the end of February 2025â. This, he suggests, will âgalvanise action behind public service reform as well as bringing clarity to what our vision for public service reform means across Scotlandâ.6
The announcement of a Public Service Reform Strategy and Summit follows a challenging report from Audit Scotland on Fiscal sustainability and reform in Scotland published in November 2024. The report found that âthe Scottish Government has not provided the necessary leadership to public sector bodies to help deliver a programme of reformâ. It has also not yet fully established effective governance arrangements for reform, and it is unclear what additional funding is required. Concerns were also raised regarding challenges in the collection of good quality data about the public sector workforce and estates.9
We heard in evidence that there is some frustration across businesses regarding the lack of progress with public service reform. SFE highlighted âthe fact is that high-performing economies around the world do three things really well: education, skills infrastructure and healthâ, adding that âreform is about improving productivity, which is about getting more out of the resources that you put inâ.10
In future years we expect to receive the Scottish Governmentâs six-monthly public service reform updates as early as possible in the pre-budget and budget process to ensure that they can be scrutinised effectively. We also repeat our recommendation that the Scottish Government provides more information in its six-monthly updates on the upfront costs allocated to reform and cumulative savings.
The Scottish Budget 2025-26 states that the Scottish Government will âdeliver an Invest to Save fund in 2025-26, backed by up to ÂŁ30m of funding recognising the need to catalyse efficiency, effectiveness and productivity projects as part of the public service reform programmeâ. It also plans to âintegrate progress on public service reform into the forthcoming FSDPâ.1 Further information on the aims of the ÂŁ30m Invest to Save fund are provided in the Scottish Governmentâs December update report to the Committee. The fund will âenable public bodies to invest in projects they could not achieve within annual revenue budgets that have a clear path to recurring savingsâ and will encourage projects involving a combination of portfolios and public bodies. The Scottish Government plans to work closely with public bodies to develop its approach and will âinvite proposals in the New Yearâ.2
However, the AGS, during evidence on 7 January 2025, suggested âit is not yet clear to us [âŚ] how the ÂŁ30m will be deployed or what the intent behind the change fund isâ, adding that ârelative to the scale of the challenge, it may be an early contribution to changing delivery of servicesâ. Public bodies we heard from at the same meeting said they are keen to know more about how they can access the fund. Food Standards Scotland (FSS), for example, told the Committee that â[âŚ] if FSS and others get access to some of that money, we could transform our services and make real savings over the next two to five yearsâ. It provided an example where securing investment of around ÂŁ6m to create a database and build in a licence fee for 75,000 food businesses could generate up to ÂŁ30m a year for the Scottish economy.3
The Committee seeks details of when the Scottish Government will publish further information regarding its Invest to Save fund, including the fundâs aims, the criteria against which bids from public bodies are to be assessed and how progress and outcomes will be monitored and measured for effectiveness.
The AGS highlighted evidence of excellent examples of public service reform across the country. We also heard first-hand from public bodies that they are achieving efficiencies through reductions in headcount, sharing services and premises and improving productivity through digitalisation and a shorter working week. Witnesses from public bodies said they would like the flexibility to include compulsory redundancies, should headcount reductions be necessary.1
Skills Development Scotland (SDS) said it has protected frontline services through reducing its headcount by 17% by the end of this financial year, halving property costs through local partner agreements, sharing services and internal training. Through introducing a 35-hour working week, South of Scotland Enterprise (SOSE) has seen a significant reduction in absence rates for sickness and stress-related or mental health-related reasons, âa 92% increase in staff moraleâ, and âno decrease at all in productivity levelsâ.1
FSS has had a 25% budget reduction over 10 years and reduced its staffing complement by 80 in the past three years through reprioritisation. It is also co-funding posts and sharing accommodation and services. NHS National Services Scotland highlighted the use of innovations including artificial intelligence in NHS services, such as radiology transformation, enabling home working, and digital dermatology to see more people and diagnose illnesses at an earlier stage.1
The December 2024 update report explains that data gathered by the Scottish Government on public body spend on corporate functions over the summer 2024 âhas been used by Cabinet Secretaries through the budget process to consider opportunities for further efficiencies and this will be an ongoing process as we move into the new financial yearâ. Further work will be carried out to better understand where there are opportunities for greater value for money and to identify duplication, collect, and embed operational data on public services into future budget processes, and support public bodies to âworkforce plan effectivelyâ as part of the forthcoming FSDP.4 During evidence to the Committee, the AGS welcomed the Scottish Governmentâs work on corporate functions as âa positive developmentâ.1
The Committee explored with witnesses from public bodies whether they had seen Scottish Government leadership in other areas of reform and if they felt they have agency to take decisions on reforming their respective organisations. SOSE was clear that it has âagency to drive change and to focus on continuous innovation and evolution of what we need to do as an agencyâ. Other bodies suggested that there is leadership and guidance provided by government on the adoption of digital systems, but not a mandatory approach.1
The Scottish Funding Council explained that its work to build a âunified data platformâ âhas been through our own agency and has not been driven by Scottish Ministersâ. This platform will enable easier sharing of data with other partners âso that we can make data-led and evidence-based decisions across the whole of the public sector in relation to Scotlandâs collegesâ. On the publication of data, public bodies, such as Transport Scotland and RoS, indicated that they publish as much data as they can, while RoS also highlighted barriers to doing so, including licensing arrangements and different rules across bodies on what information can be made freely available.1
We also heard that interoperability of systems is an area where some progress is being made, though this remains challenging particularly with limited funds.1 In our pre-budget 2025-26 report we asked the Scottish Government to set a standard for the interoperability of any newly created digital public service systems.9 Responding, the Scottish Government said its Digital Directorateâs approach âis exactly what is being requestedâ and that it is also âpursuing interoperability of data for legacy digital public service systemsâ.10
During evidence we heard many excellent examples of public bodies delivering reforms within their own organisations, working collaboratively, and achieving efficiencies and improvements to public service delivery. We are also encouraged by the Scottish Governmentâs work to collect data, including in relation to corporate functions, which has the potential to achieve efficiencies across the public sector.
However, we share the view of the Auditor General for Scotland that the Scottish Government needs to demonstrate stronger leadership and bring an overall vision to the Public Service Reform Programme, for real progress to be made, including in relation to changing models for public service delivery.
We therefore seek further details of the Scottish Governmentâs plans to publish a Public Service Reform Strategy, including the purpose and aims of this document, how it will fit with other Government strategies, such as the new Fiscal Sustainability Delivery Plan, and how success will be measured.
In our pre-budget 2025-26 report1, we asked the Scottish Government to consider and report back to the Committee on the potential benefits, risks, and costs of introducing a new category of public expenditure on preventative spend. The Scottish Government responded that it is âtaking forward work on preventative spend as part of the PSR programme and will update the Committee in due courseâ.2 This work includes developing case studies examining post devolution examples of prevention that have resulted in improved outcomes, cost savings and/or reduced demand.
As noted above, the Scottish Government has indicated that the PSR programme will have a renewed focus on early interventions and prevention. The AGS told the Committee that he is in âno doubt that preventative spend is happeningâ but is âless clear about whether we are seeing that spending ringfenced in a public service reform programmeâ. He also agreed to work with the Scottish Government to better define preventative expenditure to support clarity, transparency, and scrutiny.3
The Committee welcomes the Public Service Reform Programmeâs renewed focus on prevention and early intervention. We also support the Auditor Generalâs commitment to work with the Scottish Government to better define preventative expenditure and we look forward to receiving an update from the Scottish Government on this work in early course.
We are however unclear from the Scottish Governmentâs response to our pre-budget report whether it has accepted our recommendation that it considers and reports back to the Committee on the potential benefits, risks, and costs of introducing a new category of public expenditure on preventative spend. We request that this recommendation is now actioned.
Following evidence gathered on a fact-finding visit to Estonia where public and private partnerships are integral to the successful working of its e-Estonia digitalisation programme, the Committee asked the Scottish Government to consider adopting âa more structured model of enabling exchanges between staff in the public and private sector, including flexible career pathwaysâ and set out progress to achieving this mode of working in its six-monthly updates.1
Responding, the Scottish Government said that it would continue to use inward secondments âwithin a broad range of actions to build capabilitiesâ and that outward secondments âwill continue through the existing schemesâ and remain as a development opportunity.2
It went on to say it is updating its workforce plan, which includes capability planning activity and ensuring inward secondments are âbeing used to best effect to bring in specific skills and experience in targeted areasâ.2
The Committee heard again during budget scrutiny that there needs to be a proper debate about public-private partnerships which, the SFE argued âin itself, would help to address some of the issues around public sector reformâ.4
The Committee believes that there would be merit in the Scottish Government leading an annual parliamentary debate on public service reform, given reform is a significant priority in ensuring fiscal sustainability, and touches on the remits of almost all committees and on the lives of every individual. The possible role of public-private partnerships in enhancing capability for reform could be explored as one element of this important debate.
We ask the Scottish Government to give consideration to when would be the best time in the parliamentary calendar to schedule this debate.
Each year, as part of our scrutiny of the Scottish Budget, the Committee is required to consider the budget proposal from the Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body (SPCB).
Along with Audit Scotland, the SPCB has a prior call on the Scottish Consolidated Fund (SCF), meaning that its budget is allocated before the Scottish Government makes any other allocations. The SPCB budget provides for the operating costs of the Parliament along with the costs of the Ombudsman and Commissioners (termed 'Officeholders') which fall within the definition of SPCB supported bodies.
The SPCB submitted its budget bid to the Committee on 12 December 20241. The Presiding Officerâs letter accompanying the bid states that this constitutes âthe fourth and final of our medium-term financial plan for session 6â, focusing on âstrong financial governance and driving value for money whilst continuing to drive our strategic priorities and protect servicesâ.
To support our scrutiny of the SPCBâs budget proposal for 2025-26, we took oral evidence from SPCB Member Jackson Carlaw MSP on 14 January 2025, along with David McGill, Clerk/Chief Executive of the Scottish Parliament, and Sara Glass, Director of Finance and Resilience2.
The SPCBâs bid for 2025-26 proposes a total budget requirement (excluding capital charges and non-cash items) of ÂŁ136.2m, a net ÂŁ9.7m (7.6%) increase on the current financial yearâs budget and ÂŁ2.8m (2.1%) on the 2025-26 indicative budget advised by the SPCB in its bid to the Committee last year. The SPCB stated that its ambition had been to submit a 2025-26 Budget bid which was below the 2025-26 indicative plans, and that this has been achieved for the âcontrollableâ elements of the Budget, which are ÂŁ0.6m lower than the indicative figure. The Presiding Officerâs letter to the Committee attributes the increase in the budget bid to âchanges to Employersâ National Insurance costing ÂŁ1.9m; and unforeseen additional costs from the Electoral Commission of ÂŁ2.1m, which have been partially offset by the delayed Patient Safety Commissionerâ1.
As explained by the SPCB during oral evidence, âapproximately 70 per cent of our cost base is people â that represents ÂŁ97 million across the various staffing groupsâ2. The budget bid includes a ÂŁ2.7m (6.8%) increase in the staff pay budget compared to the current financial year. This takes account of changes to Employersâ National Insurance contributions introduced in the UK Autumn Budget and the inclusion of a cost-of-living award of 3.8% agreed with trade unions as part of the two-year pay deal, while maintaining the staffing baseline agreed in 2022-23. MSP salaries are recommended to increase in line with the Average Weekly Earnings (AWE) index of 3.2%, to ÂŁ74,506, consistent with the index being used for uprating the Staff Cost Provision.
Other changes proposed in the SPCBâs budget bid include a ÂŁ467,000 (4.8%) increase in property costs to ÂŁ10.3m, ÂŁ177,000 (2.2%) increase to ÂŁ8.16m in overall running costs, and a ÂŁ1m increase to ÂŁ6.3m in the budget for revenue and capital projects, driven primarily by inflation and expected Election project spend. The contingency figure for 2025-26 remains unchanged at ÂŁ1m. Income related to the Parliament shop is expected to decrease by ÂŁ30,000 (11.1%) to ÂŁ244,000, based on the number of visitors to the Parliament, which is yet to return to pre-pandemic levels.
The SPCBâs budget bid includes an indicative forecast for 2026-27 of ÂŁ147.6m (excluding capital charges and non-cash items), âheavily caveated with continued uncertainties in the economy and around potential additional new Commissioners with associated costsâ1. Following the same approach taken last year, this figure is based on a âblended inflationary rateâ, which reflects forecasts for wage inflation, price inflation and any known significant additional requirements.
Prior to 2024, MSP salaries were uprated in line with the Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE Mean). Evidence referenced by the SPCB in this, and last yearâs budget bids suggests that the ASHE Mean figure has become misaligned with other wage inflation indices in recent years. Consequently, the SPCB recommended the adoption of AWE as the index for the uprating of MSP salaries, starting from 2024-25. The AWE was also chosen as the uprating index for Staff Cost Provision, in line with the approach taken in 2023-24 and 2024-25 (the previous approach used a combination of AWE and the ASHE index).
The choice of uprating index for both MSP salaries and Staff Cost Provision was discussed by the Committee during evidence, particularly in view of concerns raised by MSP staff unions that the AWE is not directly linked to the cost of living. The SPCB explained that the move to using AWE for uprating Staff Cost Provision during the last three years resulted in an uplift 0.5% higher than it would have been if the previous combined index were used. The SPCB advised that it intends to continue with AWE for the remainder of the session, emphasising the need to apply a consistent approach1.
The Committee also heard that, in advance of the next parliamentary session, the SPCB is undertaking a review of Membersâ expenses and remuneration, to which parliamentary groups and individuals have been invited to contribute. The review will consider additional issues raised during evidence, such as benchmarking exercises, increased costs of accommodation in Edinburgh and office accommodation in the Lothian area, and additional payments for opposition party leaders, to reflect an increase in responsibilities.
As with costs for other staff groupings, the Officeholdersâ 2025-26 budget submissions to the SPCB reflect the impact of both inflation and increases to employersâ National Insurance contributions. In addition, ÂŁ2.1m Electoral Commission costs are included, which relate to election activities in advance of the May 2026 election. The SPCB explained that this was not included in last yearâs indicative budget due to an error relating to the transfer of responsibility to the Parliament1.
The SPCB restated its ongoing concerns regarding the growing share of its budget being spent on Officeholders, amounting to 15.7% in 2025-26. The Committeeâs recent inquiry into Scotlandâs Commissioner Landscape: A Strategic Approach2, which reported in September 20243, sought to address these and related issues. We found that the current landscape is no longer fit for purpose and called for a moratorium on creating any new SPCB supported bodies, or expanding the remit of existing bodies, until a âroot and branchâ review of the structure is carried out. Following a parliamentary debate on our findings and recommendations on 31 October 20244, a dedicated committee - the SPCB Supported Bodies Landscape Review Committee (SSBLR Committee) â has now been established to carry out the review.
We had also made a series of other recommendations that could be put in place in the meantime while this review takes place. To support this work, we sought views from relevant committees on how supported bodies within their remits fulfil their functions to inform our evidence session with the SPCB on 14 January5. Evidence gathered suggested that most committees hear from officeholders within their remits on an annual basis, with sessions largely focussed on annual reports and strategic plans, aims and objectives, and not necessarily designed to formally assess how they perform against their functions. Enhanced scrutiny takes place on an ad-hoc basis, as evidenced by the Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee in its scrutiny of the Scottish Public Services Ombudsman, however, as we heard during our inquiry, committees find it difficult to find time in their work programmes to carry out this type of in-depth regular scrutiny of officeholders.
The Committee heard from the SPCB that it has âstepped up scrutinyâ of officeholders, including through regular meetings. However, the âcorporate body feels that it is pretty close to capacity, if it has not already exceeded itâ, and scrutiny of officeholders âtakes up time, potentially at the expense of our ability as a corporate body to scrutinise many of the other important matters that come before us.â1
The SPCB also told the Committee that the written agreement setting out the division of roles between the corporate body and committees was at the stage of being reviewed when the SSBLR Committee was established. The SPCB said it hopes this work will continue âso that we can get to a situation that better reflects the parliamentary scrutiny of officeholders that we all want to see.â
Reviewing the operation of the written agreement between the SPCB and Conveners Group was one of the recommendations arising from our inquiry into Scotlandâs Commissioner Landscape. In our report on the inquiry, we also asked the SPCB toâ
continue to work with SPCB supported bodies to identify opportunities for sharing services, premises and achieving efficiencies, and to include evidence of this work in its budget bids to this Committee;
explore ways in which it will seek to bring greater transparency to its governance and oversight arrangements and discussions with SPCB supported bodies. This should include considering whether any material from internal assessments could appropriately be published for use by committees and others.
In her response to the Committeeâs report7, the Presiding Officer committed to âpromote the SPCBâs shared services agenda and provide details of services being sharedâ and âconsider whether we can enhance and make more transparent our governance arrangements with the officeholdersâ.
The SPCB budget bid includes funding for two new major projects due to start in 2025-26 â the lobbying register replacement, which provides the external website, database and workflows necessary to administer the register, and the 2026 Scottish Parliament election project.
The Committee sought assurances, during evidence, in relation to the demand for, and costs of, the lobbying register replacement, which is currently at outline business case stage. In response, the Committee heard that temporary staff are currently supporting a backlog due to changes in legislation and increased complexity of the system, and that these staff will be redeployed once the new register is in place. The SPCB noted that the efficacy of the lobbying arrangements in Scotland could be probed as part of wider post-legislative scrutiny of the Lobbying (Scotland) Act 2016.
Our report on the Scottish Budget 2024-251 included a recommendation that the SPCBâ
focus on optimising value for money in its budgetary decisions and delivery. As part of next yearâs budget bid, we would therefore like to see additional information on how the SPCB makes the most effective use of its funds, including setting out where savings have been identified and how projects have been prioritised.
While this additional information did not appear to be included in the budget proposal, the SPCB told the Committee during evidence that âthe review of services contracts and operational practices, which we introduced during last yearâs discussion, has driven cost savings, which are reflected in the 2025-26 bidâ2. It added that the budget bid includes ÂŁ100,000 of cost savings in relation to information technology and training, following the move to a managed learning service, in addition to savings that are already included in the cost base, through the maintenance of a 5% vacancy gap for parliamentary staff and a 7% equivalent in the Staff Cost Provision. Other savings had been identified through reductions in travel and expenses budgets, and the SPCB continues âto look for further opportunities, some of which are more in contractual areas and will open up as contracts come round for re-letâ.
We further heard that the SPCB has âa long list of projects that were bid for and have not been funded in the budgetâ, however, the bid does not include specific information on why projects have been prioritised, and what they are expected to achieve. In the absence of this information being included in the SPCB budget bid, we considered information in the SPCBâs annual report and accounts, published in October 20243, in order to gain more of an insight into how the SPCB prioritises major projects and the Parliamentâs overarching strategic approach.
The Committee notes the SPCBâs budget proposal for 2025-26.
We welcome the SPCBâs efforts to submit a bid below the indicative figures presented with last yearâs proposals and note that this has been achieved for what the SPCB describes as the âcontrollableâ elements of the budget.
The Committee, however, repeats our request for future bids to include more detailed information on how the SPCB has achieved savings and prioritised spend. This could be provided in the form of case studies, following a similar format to that used in the SPCBâs annual report under âa closer lookâ. We would welcome detail on the aims and outcomes of specific projects, and how decisions about prioritisation have been reached.
In our report on Scotlandâs Commissioner Landscape, we made specific recommendations for the SPCB, to put in place pending the wider review undertaken by the new SSBLR Committee. We seek an update from the SPCB on progress with the implementation of these recommendations, particularly in relation to shared services and enhancing the transparency of governance arrangements with officeholders.
In light of the current widescale public service reform exercise as well as significant pressures on Scotlandâs public finances, we recommend that future bids also include information on the specific actions the SPCB is taking to deliver reforms within the Parliament, such as digitalisation, collaboration, and sharing of corporate functions and premises. An assessment of the impact of these actions should also be provided.
We note the reference, in the current bid, to a medium-term financial plan for Session 6. The Committee would welcome further information on how the SPCB is approaching the development of its medium-term financial plan for Session 7. We ask that the plan is published in full to support future scrutiny of the SPCBâs budget bids.