Finance and Public Administration Committee
The Finance and Public Administration Committeeâs pre-budget 2026-27 scrutiny builds on our findings over successive years regarding a lack of strategic financial planning in the Scottish Government against a backdrop of significant fiscal pressures, not least future demographic trends.
According to the Scottish Fiscal Commission (SFC), âthe Scottish Government will face significant challenges funding devolved public services in the future, particularly over the next twenty-five years ⌠because the population in Scotland will age earlier than in the rest of the UKâ.1 The Scottish Governmentâs 2025 Medium-Term Financial Strategy (MTFS) confirms that the gap between funding and resource spending, which comprises 90% of the Scottish Budget, will rise to ÂŁ2.6 billion by 2029-30.2
Shorter term, the Cabinet Secretary for Finance and Local Government has warned that âdifficult choices will be requiredâ in the upcoming Scottish Budget.3 Challenging decisions also lie ahead for the UK Government in its Autumn Statement, with the Office for Budget Responsibility recently noting that âthe scale and array of risks to the UK fiscal outlook remains dauntingâ.4
A feature of our pre-budget and budget scrutiny throughout this session has been late publication of key documents, hindering parliamentary scrutiny. This year, both the MTFS and Scottish Budget have been delayed due to the timing of UK fiscal events. The timetable for scrutiny of the Scottish Budget 2026-27 and associated documents in January 2026 is unacceptably short. This report therefore urges the UK Government to place greater emphasis on the impact on devolved budgets when considering the timing of its fiscal events.
This report explores what steps the Scottish Government is taking now to start to respond to long-term fiscal pressures and identifies where more action is needed. This includes considering whether the Scottish Governmentâs key financial planning documents, including its MTFS and new Fiscal Sustainability Delivery Plan (FSDP)5, demonstrate improved medium and longer-term financial planning. In addition, we look ahead to the first comprehensive Scottish Spending Review since 2011 and long-awaited infrastructure plans, while also considering the Scottish Governmentâs approach to public service reform and growing the economy.
The Committee launched a call for views6 on 13 June which ran until 11 August 2025 and received 28 written submissions7. Oral evidence sessions with a range of witnesses took place on 2, 9, 16 and 30 September.8
In addition to evidence gathered, our report also draws on learning from fact-finding visits to the Advanced Manufacturing Innovation District Scotland (AMIDS) in Paisley, and to Lithuania where we heard more about its futures-thinking approach and policies on economic growth. Further details can be found in a note of the visit to AMIDS and a detailed report of our visit to Lithuania, both of which are available on the Committeeâs pre-budget 2026-27 web pages.9
The Committee thanks our budget adviser, Professor Mairi Spowage, Director of the Fraser of Allander Institute (FAI), and the Financial Scrutiny Unit in SPICe, for their support with this work. We also thank those who took the time to provide evidence and to meet with us during our visits, which have helped shape our findings and recommendations.
With the aim of supporting parliamentary committeesâ pre-budget scrutiny, the Scottish Government normally publishes its MTFS in May each year, alongside Economic and Fiscal Forecasts produced by the SFC. The Scottish Government opted not to publish an MTFS in 2024, due to a change in First Minister and thereafter a UK general election being called. The Scottish Government later advised that the 2025 MTFS would not be published as intended on 29 May 2025, and would instead be scheduled for 25 June 2025, following the UK Spending Review on 11 June.
At the time, the Committee outlined our disappointment that this would mean âthe earliest opportunity for Committee scrutiny of the MTFS would be when Parliament resumed in early September, over two months later [and âŚ] that subject committeesâ consideration of their pre-budget scrutiny approaches that take place in May/June could not, as intended, be informed by the Scottish Governmentâs medium-term outlookâ. We also expressed concern that âwith no MTFS since May 2023, details of the Scottish Governmentâs medium-term approach are now urgentâ.
As noted above, the Scottish Governmentâs seventh MTFS was published alongside a new document â the FSDP â âbringing together the key actions the Scottish Government is taking to deliver the fiscal strategy over the next five years, from now until financial year 2029-2030â. Published on 19 June 2025, the Scottish Governmentâs first Public Service Reform Strategy1 sets out âcommitments to change the system of public services - to be preventative, to better join up and to be efficient - in order to better deliver for peopleâ.
The SFC decided to proceed with publication of Scotlandâs Economic and Fiscal Forecasts on the original date for the MTFS in May2 âas all the necessary forecasting analysis and engagement with the Government had taken place by the time we were informed of the delayâ. The SFC explained that âwe also believe the publication of these forecasts supports transparency and parliamentary scrutinyâ. It published a follow-up report to accompany publication of the MTFS on 25 June3 providing further detail and commentary on the Governmentâs funding position and a formal assessment of the reasonableness of the Governmentâs borrowing plansâ. Its June 2025 report also includes a restatement of the forecasts published in May âthereby fulfilling our duty to publish forecasts to accompany the MTFSâ.
The SFC published its second Fiscal Update4 on 26 August 2025. This Update âconsiders how recent developments in the economic and fiscal outlook have affected the Scottish Budget in 2025-26 and how they may affect the upcoming 2026-27 Budget and the Spending Reviewâ. The Scottish Budget and Scottish Spending Review are both to be published on 13 January 2026, alongside infrastructure plans which have been delayed since December 2023 for reasons that remain unclear to the Committee.
Regular fiscal events and publication of key financial planning documents are crucial in enabling robust and effective parliamentary scrutiny. It is therefore disappointing that repeated delays have been a feature of this session of Parliament.
The Committee has committed to engaging further with the Scottish Government and the Scottish Fiscal Commission to explore whether an optimal time can be secured for both budget formulation and scrutiny.ĚýWe also urge the UK Government to place greater emphasis on the impact on devolved budgets when considering the timing of its fiscal events.
The Committee further wishes to acknowledge the SFCâs continued commitment to supporting this Committee and Parliament to carry out effective parliamentary scrutiny through its regular and robust analysis, evidence and briefings.
As noted above, the SFC in its Fiscal Sustainability Report â April 2025 suggests the Scottish Government will face significant challenges funding devolved public services in the future, particularly over the next 25 years. This, it explains, is because the population in Scotland will age earlier than in the rest of the UKi, and a growing number of people in older age groups is likely to lead to more healthcare spending. However, the SFC argues that âif improvements in population health can be achieved, pressure on health-related spending may be reduced in the futureâ.1
The Report also highlights that spending on health, already the largest proportion of spend in the Scottish Budget, is expected to grow by 238% by the end of the projection period (2074-75)ii. Spending on social care is projected to grow by 131% and spending on social security by 129%. Other areas of spending are facing a 92% increase except for education at 69%.
The Report measures fiscal sustainability using what it describes as the âannual budget gapâ, which it defines as âa hypothetical gap between funding and spending that highlights the Scottish Governmentâs long-term fiscal challengesâ.ĚýThe SFC estimates that due to Scotland specific demographic challenges, the average annual budget gap is minus 1.5% in the first twenty years (from 2030-31 to 2049-50), and minus 0.9% in the second twenty-five years (from 2050-51 to 2074-75).1
To balance the budget, the SFC suggests that Scottish devolved spending would have to be reduced by 1.2% each year. This is equivalent to savings of ÂŁ1 billion in 2024-25 prices.Ěý
Over the next five years, the Scottish Governmentâs total funding is expected to grow by 0.7% in real terms a year. Over the same period, in real terms, resource funding is expected to increase by 1% a year while capital funding is set to fall by 1.8% a year. The SFC, in its June 2025 Forecasts, concludes that the gaps between the Scottish Governmentâs spending projections and the available funding are âsignificantâ. For resource, âthere is a move from a balanced budget in 2025-26 to a gap of just under ÂŁ1 billion in 2026-27 and a gap of over ÂŁ2.6 billion in 2029-30. For capital, the gap reaches ÂŁ2.1 billion by 2029-30â.3
The total forecast tax net position ranges from ÂŁ1.2 billion in 2025-26 to ÂŁ2.3 billion in 2029-2030. Income tax is the largest component of the net tax position, amounting to almost ÂŁ2.2 billion in 2029-30. The MTFS notes that for income tax âthere is substantial downside risk associated with the net position in later yearsâ. This risk is driven by âdivergent earnings growthâ between the SFC and the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) which is âgreater than has historically been the caseâ.4
The 2025 MTFS notes that the Scottish Government is committed to deliver a strategy which ensures that âthe public finances remain sustainable over the medium termâ and is built around the three pillars of public spending, economic growth, and taxation. The Scottish Government argues that âthe MTFS responds to the scale of the fiscal challenge that we faceâ and the FSDP brings together the actions from across Government to deliver fiscal sustainability under the three pillars. Together, the Scottish Government suggests, the two documents âset out a credible plan to ensure we can continue to deliver this Governmentâs prioritiesâ.1
The Committee explored in evidence the adequacy of the Scottish Governmentâs medium-term plans set out in the MTFS and FSDP, and how it intends to respond to longer-term fiscal pressures. Evidence we received suggested that the Scottish Government has set out more information on the scale of the fiscal challenges that lie ahead than in previous years, but further detail is needed on how these will be addressed. Evidence of longer-term financial planning is limited.
While noting that the MTFS for the first time clearly sets out assumptions underlying the main scenarios, the FAI suggested that the FSDP âseems more like a disparate set of aspirations than a coherent plan, and it lacks the attributes that anything approaching delivery would requireâ. The FAI said it remains unclear why the FSDP needs to be a separate document to the MTFS, adding that the FSDP appears to be âlacking an overall statement on how the proposed savings would add up and how they compare with the fiscal gaps in the MTFSâ.2
The Scottish Womenâs Budget Group also highlighted insufficient detail on the scale, or the timings of the investment required to deliver the efficiencies that the FSDP aims to achieve3, and Oxfam Scotland said, âneither the MTFS nor the FSDP adequately address the well documented fiscal challenges facing the Scottish Government in future yearsâ. It went on to note âclear contradictions, a re-hashing of existing policy commitments and in many instances where they point to new policy, there is a clear lack of detail to when and how this will be progressed and implemented in practiceâ.4
We also heard from Audit Scotland that âthe extent to which the Scottish Governmentâs spending projections are linked to existing spending commitments means it is difficult to see where and to what extent future portfolio budgets can flex to meet fiscal pressuresâ. Audit Scotland also argued that better alignment between Scottish Government documents such as the MTFS, FSDP and PSR Strategy is important for scrutiny.5 East Ayrshire Council further expressed concern that the âjoined-up nature of these documents will be lost at the next Scottish Budgetâ.6
The Committee notes the welcome improvements in the level of information provided in the MTFS on the challenges ahead. Like the FAI, we do not believe that a separate document is necessary to set out how the Scottish Government is responding to these medium-term pressures. The information could just as simply be included in the MTFS, enabling better clarity and cohesion.
We do not share the Scottish Governmentâs view that the two documents âset out a credible planâ to ensure it can continue to deliver its priorities. In future iterations, we seek more detail on the cumulative impact the measures will have in closing the fiscal gaps set out in the MTFS, along with a timetable for implementation to allow monitoring of progress.
The SFC told us that while the MTFS sets out the scale of the challenge that the Government faces in balancing its budget, âjust as importantly, the Scottish Budget also faces long-term pressures beyond the five years covered by the MTFS, as we have highlighted in our work on fiscal sustainabilityâ.1
Social Work Scotland (SWS) made the case for extending the time horizons of the MTFS, given âthe basis for longer-term planning existsâ through the SFCâs April 2025 Fiscal Sustainability Report and the risk of longer-term challenges such as climate change not being addressed through medium-term plans.2
We asked the Scottish Government to provide a full response to the SFCâs Fiscal Sustainability Report on demographics published in March 2023, and to schedule a debate to enable a broader discussion across Parliament about longer-term fiscal challenges.3 While the Cabinet Secretary for Finance and Local Government (FLG) announced during the debate held in October 20244 that an FSDP would be published for the first time alongside the 2025 MTFS, as noted above this only covers the same five-year period. We therefore remain in the dark on the Scottish Governmentâs longer-term financial plans.
In our Report on Public Administration: Effective Scottish Government Decision-Making published in July 2023, we made broader recommendations relating to futures planning, including that the Scottish Government should give consideration âto developing and publishing long-term insight briefings, drawing out the challenges Scotland is likely to face over the next half centuryâ.5 The then Permanent Secretary said in response that reports of longer-term insights would be published in early autumn 2024 âto create a new resource for public bodies and partners in the third and private sectorsâ.6 We welcome the first of these insights, Future Trends for Scotland, published in June 2025.7
We committed in our Report on the Scottish Budget Process in Practice, published in June 2025, to explore further the idea of a Committee for the Future as part of pre-budget 2026-27 scrutiny, âgiven the limitations around the Scottish Governmentâs strategic financial planning this session along with the long-term fiscal pressures facing Scotlandâ.8 As part of our visit to Lithuania in September we therefore discussed how the country is responding to similar demographic challenges to Scotland, including its approach of developing a long-term vision for the country supported through a Parliamentary Committee for the Future.
We learned that Lithuania 2050, Lithuaniaâs vision for the future was approved by Parliament and has buy-in from political parties, public sector, civic society and the public, due to extensive involvement in its development and a clear framework around actions and monitoring progress. Leadership is provided by the State Progress Council, chaired by the Prime Minister, with representation from all political parties and the public sector, and monitoring of progress against the vision is provided by the Committee for the Future. All long-term strategies are to be aligned with the vision.
Priorities for the country include stabilising demographic decline, through a combination of four areas of focus: (1) migration, (2) attracting people into work, (3) living longer and healthier lives, and (4) family policies. During our visit we also heard from Create Lithuania, which was established in 2012 to identify and support Lithuanians living and working abroad to return for short-term contracts where they can work on a project matched to their interests and skills. They analyse an issue, identify good practice and develop and then implement solutions. We learned that organisations involved tend to seek to retain these people as experts beyond the programme, leading to over 300 Lithuanians returning to the country to live and work.
The Lithuanian Government Strategic Analysis Centre (STRATA) is analysing each theme from Lithuania 2050 and producing foresight papers, e.g. on migration, consulting with experts and the public on concrete actions to implement the vision.
The Lithuanian Parliamentâs Committee for the Future has 17 Members representing all political groups and focuses on long-term trends and strategic interests. The Committee receives a report from Government showing the direction of travel against the countryâs long-term priorities and has a key role in monitoring progress against delivery of these commitments. It was suggested that the Committee âacts as a change agentâ in public governance and that âit changes mindsets and embeds foresight thinkingâ.
The Cabinet Secretary for FLG said she would be happy to look at the Lithuanian model in more detail. She went on to say âI know that this will be difficult in the current political climate, but if we were able to establish enough of a consensus about what such a vision would look like, we might be able to have some kind of landing space in which, although we might disagree on certain things, we could agree on the things that we need to move towardsâ.9
The Committee urges the Scottish Government to place much greater emphasis on longer-term financial planning in order to start mitigating the potential significant impact of future trends.
In the first instance, the Committee calls on the Scottish Government to provide a full response to the SFCâs 2025 Fiscal Sustainability Report. We are disappointed that a fiscal sustainability debate has not yet been scheduled for 2025 and we ask the Scottish Government to commit to an annual parliamentary debate on the topic, as it provides an opportunity for all Members to discuss the long-term challenges ahead and how these might be addressed.
More broadly, the Committee is impressed by the approach taken to collectively develop and implement Lithuania 2050, Lithuaniaâs vision for the future, with progress towards achieving the vision monitored by a parliamentary committee. This model has the potential to have more teeth than the National Performance Framework, which we note is not mentioned at all in either the MTFS or FSDP. We therefore welcome the Cabinet Secretaryâs willingness to consider the Lithuanian model in more detail and we seek an update on her conclusions by the end of January 2026.
We also ask the Scottish Government to consider whether there are lessons it can learn from the Create Lithuania programme in attracting people from Scotland to return here to live and work.
Most witnesses noted improvements regarding the transparency and presentation of budgetary information in recent years.
The SFC for example acknowledged that âa lot has been done over the past few years to improve the level of information that is provided in budget documents and to make it more transparentâ, including presenting the budget document for 2025-26 based on the change between the Autumn Budget Revision (ABR) and the following yearâs spend. The SFC argued that further improvements could include publishing additional information on internal transfers or presenting the Budget with all spending shown at the outset under the portfolio where it will ultimately incur the spending.1
In respect of the MTFS, both the FAI and SWS called for the calculations behind the underlying assumptions to be made available so they can be assessed fully.2
The Cabinet Secretary for FLG previously committed to exploring further improvements to the presentation of budgetary information.3
The Committee seeks a response from the Scottish Government regarding our request that all regular internal transfers are baselined in the Scottish Budget. We also ask that in future years the calculations behind the underlying assumptions in the MTFS are published.
Pillar 1 of the MTFS is on public spending, specifically ensuring that public money is focused on delivering government objectives, underpinned by reform and prioritisation to maximise impact.1 The Scottish Governmentâs four prioritiesi ˛š°ůąđâ
eradicating child poverty,
growing the economy,
tackling the climate emergency, and
improving public services.
During evidence to the Committee on 2 September, the Cabinet Secretary for FLG explained that âour approach is designed to support the delivery of the Governmentâs four key prioritiesâ. She went on to say, âthat means making choices that focus spending where it has the greatest impact, supporting inclusive economic growth and ensuring a fair and strategic approach to taxationâ.2
However, we heard from witnesses that there is little evidence of prioritisation. The FAI for example told us that the MTFS âessentially assumes no prioritisation of needs and funding for different areas, merely growing them in the assumption that all are equal priorities for the Scottish Government [âŚ, which] in practice cannot really be trueâ.3 The FAI added âwe await some detail on what the Government wants to prioritise and deprioritiseâ.4
Colleges Scotland also told us that future MTFS should link achievements to specific priorities to assist in understanding of spending decisions5, while Audit Scotland said, âit would be useful to see a clear line that shows how each spending measure addressed the prioritiesâ.4
Asked to evidence how the Scottish Government has prioritised spend, the Cabinet Secretary for FLG explained that all areas of spend in each portfolio have been âpivotedâ to the Governmentâs four priorities, with difficult decisions made âabout things that we cannot take forward and things that we might have to return to in the future should finances allowâ.2 She also provided examples of limiting the expansion of free school meals and targeting a real-term funding uplift to patient-facing front-line health boards.8
The Committee seeks clarity in future documents on which areas of spending are being prioritised and deprioritised. We also recommend that Audit Scotlandâs suggestion that there is âa clear line that shows how each spending measure addresses the Scottish Governmentâs prioritiesâ is actioned in future Budgets.
The MTFS highlights the SFCâs June 2025 forecasts showing overall expenditure on social security increasing significantly from ÂŁ6.8 billion in 2025-26 to ÂŁ8.8 billion by 2029-30. Total additional spend reflecting policy choices in Scotland (over and above equivalent policies in England) rises from just over ÂŁ1 billion in 2025-26 to ÂŁ1.8 billion in 2029-30 according to the MTFS.1 Based on 2025-26 Budget plans, spending on social security will be 55% above 2020-21 levels in real terms, because of the Scottish Governmentâs expanded policies on social security and rising numbers of people receiving disability payments in Scotland as well as across the UK.2 Taking account of demographic trends, the SFC in its 2025 Fiscal Sustainability Report projects disability payments to increase from ÂŁ4.2 billion in 2023-24 to ÂŁ16 billion (current prices) in 2074-75.3
The MTFS explains that âsocial security is an investment in the people of Scotlandâ and that âthe Scottish Government is building a modern social security system with dignity, fairness and respect at its heart, where people receive the support to which they are entitledâ. It also commits the Scottish Government âto protect the current benefits offer while improving the efficiency of how we deliver benefits through improving communication to clients, investment in digital and automation of some payments, and continuing to pursue initiatives which increase the ability to tackle fraud and error where it does occurâ.1
The Committee previously requested that the MTFS includes an update on the fiscal sustainability of social security spend including âdetails 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 Budgetâ.5 This information has not been provided.
The Committee explored during evidence the sustainability of the growing social security budget and its impact on other areas of spending within the Scottish Budget. The STUC told us that âwhile the Scottish Governmentâs policy choice to invest in social security over and above the funding received from the UK Government through the Block Grant Adjustment (BGA), is welcome, it is not sustainable unless accompanied by additional tax revenueâ. The STUC therefore argued that a tax review should take place alongside the Scottish Spending Review.6
The Committee notes that in Lithuania, the countryâs reserve funds are drawn on or added to if demand-led spending on social security and health does not correspond with original plans in the Budget.
The Cabinet Secretary for FLG told the Committee that the Scottish Government is investing ÂŁ649 million in this financial year in the package of seven benefits and payments that are available only in Scotland, adding that âwe believe that this is not just an investment that is essential for the future cohesion of our society but one that has an economic benefit as wellâ. She noted âthe fact that we are the only part of the UK with falling child poverty rates tells me that it is an investment worth makingâ.7 The Cabinet Secretary for Social Justice (SJ), at a separate evidence session on 16 September 2025, said "I disagree with the suggestion that our benefits are unsustainable".8
In response to questions about whether social security assistance is the best way to move people out of poverty, the Cabinet Secretary for FLG acknowledged that it is âone aspect of assisting people with poverty; the others are about ensuring well-paid employment and allowing people to take part in education and trainingâ.7 The Cabinet Secretary for SJ also referred to evidence received by the Scottish Government that the Scottish Child Payment, at its current level, is not a disincentive to people taking up employment.8
The Committee is not convinced that the Scottish Government has set out sufficient evidence to support its argument that the future social security budget is sustainable.
We are disappointed that the MTFS did not include the information we requested on the fiscal sustainability of social security spend including 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 therefore ask it to carry out and report back on this work without further delay.
The Committee also requests that the Scottish Government undertakes a review of the extent to which the level of social security assistance provided supports economic activity.
The Committee also sought clarity regarding the Scottish Governmentâs approach to recover historical fraudulent claims and overpayments of ÂŁ36 million, given reports in the media that it would not be pursuing this sum. The Cabinet Secretary for SJ explained to the Committee that the Scottish Government disagrees with, and has therefore opted out of, some aspects of the UK Governmentâs approach to recovering these historical sums.8
She explained that work is underway with the Department for Work and Pensions to âget an understanding of what sits behind that ÂŁ36 millionâthat is, what proportion of that ÂŁ36 million is for disability benefits, what is for carers and what is for industrial injuriesâbecause those will have different recovery proportionsâ. She also indicated that Social Security Scotland (SSS) will continue to take a zero-tolerance approach to fraud and that any decision to write off any debts will be made only on an exceptional basis and after a full assessment has been taken.8
The Cabinet Secretary for SJ added that no single Scottish Budget would be impacted by historical debt as sums are recovered over a longer period.8
The Committee seeks an update on the Scottish Governmentâs plans to recover historical fraudulent claims and overpayments following its discussions with the Department for Work and Pensions on the composition of the debt.Ěý
The Committee explored with witnesses the merits of universality compared to targeted funding in the context of immediate and long-term fiscal pressures. The FAI told us that âthe approach of universal delivery versus targeted delivery should definitely be something to discussâ, adding âthere are areas where universal delivery can have a much bigger impact than others on overall spending and overall effectivenessâ. We also heard that decisions on universality or targeting should be evidence-based.1
The STUC raised the specific example of the Small Business Bonus Scheme (SBBS), stating âthere has been absolutely no evidence that theâI thinkâseveral billion pounds, cumulatively, that has been spent on that has actually helpedâ. It went on to suggest that providing more targeted assistance to small businesses, âwould save couple of hundred millionâ. Concerns were also raised that the Scottish Government had not acted on FAI analysis published in March 2022 which found little evidence showing the SBBS has supported enhanced business outcomes.1
On this specific point, the Cabinet Secretary for FLG noted that âwe keep things under review and, if we could support businesses in a more effective way, we should be open to doing thatâ, adding that removing the support âwould not be the right thing to doâ in the current economic climate.3
More broadly, the Cabinet Secretary argued âthere is always a balance to be struck around what is universal provision and what is more targetedâ including in the context of fiscal constraint.4 The Cabinet Secretary for SJ also told the Committee that âthere are reasons to have universalism and there are other policies that should be targeted, but the Government has no plans to take away benefits or entitlements from peopleâ, adding âthat is important reassurance we can giveâ.5
Given the level of fiscal gap, the Committee recommends that the Scottish Government carries out a review of the spending and outcomes arising from universal payments and services, if this is not already taking place as part of the 2025 Scottish Spending Review.
We also ask the Scottish Government to give further consideration to the evidence produced by the FAI on the Small Business Bonus Scheme and whether targeted relief could provide better outcomes.
As noted above, reform is included in the public spending pillar in the MTFS which sets out four key measures of public value, efficiencies and productivity, service reform and prevention. Reform is also a key part of this Committeeâs remit.
During the Committeeâs inquiry into public service reform in 2023, we heard evidence to suggest that the Christie Commissionâs 2011 report1 on the future delivery of public services based around people, partnership, prevention and performance remains relevant today but progress towards its vision and recommendations has been limited.2 This view is echoed by the Minister for Public Finance in his Foreword to the Scottish Governmentâs first PSR Strategy â Delivering for Scotland. He notes that âdespite some significant successesâ, the Christie Commissionâs vision âhas not been delivered to its full potentialâ.3
The Minister suggests that the PSR Strategy addresses this challenge; it âidentifies the underlying systemic barriers and root causes which prevent us moving faster and further and sets out practical actions to overcome those barriersâ. He confirms âthis is not about reducing service provision [;âŚ] it is about delivering existing public services more effectively and efficientlyâ.3
The PSR Strategy has three pillars: prevention, joined up services, and efficient services. It also includes a section setting out how the Scottish Government will measure and understand progress, which notes that each of the workstreams and programmes included has its own governance and evaluation framework. Monitoring and evaluation will also take place at a âsystem wide level to ensure coordinationâ, through the Public Service Reform Board and a Theory of Change and Monitoring, Evaluation and Learning Framework is being developed to support this work.3
Witnesses told us that the PSR Strategy is welcome in looking at Government strategies across the piece, however, they highlighted that the higher the number of Government strategies, the higher the risk that they do not align. Audit Scotland explained that âan inevitable risk as the base of strategies grows is that, over time, the strategies are no longer aware of each otherâ.6 Following a request from the Committee, the Scottish Government confirmed that as of 22 August 2025 it had 100 live strategies in place.7
The Scottish Womenâs Budget Group suggested that the PSR Strategy does not clearly articulate the intended outcomes and how success will be measured8, a view shared by SCVO which suggested greater detail is needed on timelines, indicators and working structures to track whether commitments are being met.9
The Committee welcomes the Scottish Governmentâs renewed impetus on public service reform. We seek further information on how the Change and Monitoring, Evaluation and Learning Framework being developed will support robust assessment of progress and outcomes.
As the Scottish Government now has a baseline figure for the number of live strategies it has in place, the Committee asks it to report annually on what steps it is taking to monitor and reduce this number wherever possible to minimise overlap and ensure alignment.
The PSR Strategy commits to reducing annualised Scottish Government and public body corporate costs by ÂŁ1 billion over the next five years, representing around 20% of the identified public body corporate and core government operating costs. It sets out various workstreams to help achieve this aim, including (but not limited to) data collection, workforce reform, digital skills and resource, shared services, scaling Intelligent Automation, expansion of National Collaborative Procurement and the single Scottish estate, which itself aims to deliver ÂŁ50 million of savings by 2028.1
The Scottish Government has since also committed to a public sector workforce reduction of around 0.5% a year over the next five years, with âfrontline services remaining protectedâ.2
The SFCâs Fiscal Update notes that the FSDP âidentified broad areas of efficiency and reforms in the public sector which the Government plans to use to close the fiscal gaps identified in the MTFSâ. However, it goes on to say that âexcept for the commitment to reduce the size of the workforce, the detail of how these efficiencies and reforms would be achieved was not includedâ.3
Witnesses told us there needs to be a clear, detailed plan which sets out the areas of the public sector where more or fewer staff are needed on which to base decisions around workforce. The FAI also said that the FSDP is unclear if the Scottish Government has fully appreciated that 0.5% is only the net figure and thinking is needed on what the gross figures in each part of government need to be to deliver that target.4
We heard from Audit Scotland that the Scottish Government needs to understand the correct workforce level that it requires to deliver public services, âincluding how it might change the way that it delivers services, whether that is through digital, new ways of working or what have youâ.4 Witnesses also noted that productivity in the public service workforce, through effective resourcing including digitalisation, will be crucial in achieving the efficiencies the Scottish Government say are necessary.4
The Committee heard concerns regarding the blanket aim to preserve frontline jobs, when reducing back-office roles has an impact on the time those on the frontline can dedicate to delivering services. The FAI told us it is unclear if the Scottish Government is aware of the impact on the âfrontlineâ of focusing workforce reductions on âback-officeâ staff. It added that the idea that the Governmentâs 0.5% target âwill have no effect on frontline services [...] seems implausible in the absence of some pretty heroic improvements in productivityâ.4
The STUC questioned the credibility of the public sector efficiency targets and noted that the workforce reduction target of 0.5% per annum over five years âis simply salami slicing and will lead to the loss of 12,000 jobsâ.8 It argued, âhow we go about public sector reform, how we involve workers and how it is framedâin terms of it being about better outcomes for the people who they care for rather than about top-down budget cutsâare really, really important if we are to get the best outcomeâ.4
Asked to explain the increase in civil service headcount in recent years, the Cabinet Secretary for FLG said that growth has not occurred in all areas, but numbers have increased where more responsibilities have arisen from devolution (Social Security Scotland) or from bringing bodies into public ownership (ScotRail).10
The Cabinet Secretary reiterated that these reforms must be carried out in âa managed wayâ and prioritise and protect the front line. She suggested âpeople will leave partly through natural attrition and voluntary severanceâ, but compulsory redundancies are a backstop where other options have been exhausted.11
She further indicated that the target for reducing corporate staff numbers âis sending a clear message that corporate functions in the public sector need to be done differentlyâ and that she expects all parts of the public sector to produce plans on how they will reduce their corporate costs.11 She was clear during evidence that the 0.5% annual reduction in public service workforce "absolutely has to be delivered and it will be" and that the 20% reduction in corporate costs is also "a requirement that we have to deliver on".10
The Committee urges the Scottish Government to set out a detailed plan on how it will meet its high-level targets on efficiencies and workforce while minimising the impact on public services. Evidence and trends suggest these targets will be incredibly challenging to meet.
We are also not convinced the Scottish Government has sufficiently considered potential impacts on frontline services of targeting back-office jobs for cuts and request that the detailed plan provides evidence to show how this will work in practice.
The plan should also include an assessment of where more or fewer staff are needed and the actions the Scottish Government will take to encourage improvements in public sector productivity, in addition to maximising opportunities for digitisation and automation to help achieve its targets.Ěý
We heard during our fact-finding visit to Lithuania that a Data Lake is being developed to document all public sector data in the country, integrate, centralise and âopen it upâ, with the aim of increasing the stateâs resilience to threats. The Data Lake is regarded by the Statistics Data Agency as a âsafe spaceâ and a âpowerful platformâ for public sector organisations to request and link to data.
One of the reasons for creating the Data Lake was the lack of interoperability of systems in the public sector. The process of developing the Data Lake was lengthy, including establishing what data the country has and how it could be linked, and helping organisations to understand the data they hold and its potential impact.
The Committee seeks an update from the Scottish Government on whether it is considering taking a similar approach to that in Lithuania, where a Data Lake has been created to âopen upâ public sector data. The utilisation of public sector data in this way is fundamental to securing efficiencies, promoting innovation and maximising opportunities in AI.
The Scottish Governmentâs public sector pay policy published in December 2024 provides a framework for yearly pay deals to be limited to a 3% increase in 2025-26 or to a cumulative 9% over three years from 2025-26 to 2027-28.1 In its Fiscal Update, the SFC noted that âthe pay deals agreed have all exceeded the Scottish Governmentâs public sector pay policyâ and further stated that âunless deals with nominal pay growth of around 1% are accepted for the final year, the policy of 9% pay increases over three years will be exceededâ.2
The SFC expanded on this issue during evidence, stating that âit is incumbent on the Government to consider, and we would hope to see, that the spending review provides a strategy for how the public sector workforce and the pay bill in its entirety are going to be managed and set out over the medium termâ. This, it suggests, should include a strategy around exactly what the total cost is of the public sector pay bill, including progression, inflation and grade inflation, adding âit is also about the balance between decisions on pay relative to decisions about the workforceâ.3
The FAI highlighted public sector pay as one of the most important fiscal challenges, noting that pay is higher in Scotland than all UK regions apart from London, and that Scotland has a larger public sector workforce.4 The SFC suggested that âhigher-than-anticipated pay increases would mean the workforce reductions required would be larger than those announced ⌠to keep the pay bill at the levels intended by 2029-30â.2
The Cabinet Secretary for the FLG was asked to explain the Scottish Governmentâs approach in more detail during evidence. She said that "through having mainly two-year public sector pay deals, we can now focus all the effort on reform, efficiency and doing things differently, rather than on the annual round of pay negotiationsâ. This, she argued, has âa big valueâ, adding âwe have tried to land somewhere reasonable that gives some certainty, buys us some peace and gets us moving into reform territoryâ.6
The Committee shares the SFCâs view that the Scottish Spending Review should include a strategy for how the public sector workforce and public sector pay bill are going to be managed over the medium-term. This should provide greater clarity about how decisions on pay impact choices on the size of the workforce and vice versa.
The 2025-26 Scottish Budget included an Invest to Save Fund of up to ÂŁ30 million which recognised âthe need to catalyse efficiency, effectiveness and productivity projects as part of the PSR programmeâ.1 The PSR Strategy states that the Fund will be developed to support the move to preventative investment.2
The Committee heard that while the Fund is welcome, the sum involved is insufficient and results could be âupscaled dramaticallyâ if the Fund was expanded. It was also argued that monitoring is needed on how the funding is being spent and what outcomes are being achieved.3
The Cabinet Secretary for FLG explained that the Scottish Government âwanted to see what the interest and level of ambition and ideas would be for a [⌠Fund] of that magnitudeâ, adding âwe are very thoughtful about, first, the need to keep the Fund going beyond one year, and secondly, the level of the Fundâ.4
The Committee seeks details of how the projects receiving funding under the Invest to Save Fund are being monitored for outcomes and whether success is being shared more widely across the public sector.
We also request further information on whether the Fund is being continued and expanded into future years, as requested by witnesses.
As noted earlier in this report, prevention is one of the three pillars in the PSR Strategy, which notes that people in Scotland have told the Government that âdespite the importance of prevention, we have not moved the dial sufficiently to prevent damaging experiences and reduce the risk of future need that leads to expensive demand for public servicesâ. The Strategy recognises that prevention is important to fiscal sustainability and âwe must change how our system operates to invest in the most impactful approaches to deliver on preventionâ.1
The Strategy sets out workstreams on understanding and mitigating demand drivers and preventative budgeting under this pillar, including re-designing the Scottish Governmentâs approach to identifying, tracking and monitoring preventative spend.1
Audit Scotland told us it has been useful to begin to see in recent Government publications âthe difference in pounds and pence that preventative measures could make over the longer termâ.3 However, SWS called for better links between the MTFS, FSDP and PSR Strategy, particularly around prevention and preventative spend.4
Some potential benefits of preventative approaches were also highlighted by witnesses, including measures to improve population health and reduce health inequalities, such as walking and wheeling. Walking Scotland told us that given the changing demographics, getting very inactive people more active and enabling them to stay active longer is crucial.3 We also heard from Public Health Scotland (PHS) that a public health approach to prevention âwould stop issues emerging in the first placeâ and that âby supporting individuals with chronic health conditions, Scotland can improve workforce participation, tackle child poverty, support economic growth and contribute to fiscal sustainabilityâ.6
There were calls from witnesses for a definition of âpreventative spendâ to enable it to be identified and tracked over time, particularly given the time lag in achieving outcomes. Audit Scotland said, âwe will be interested, as we move through the coming year, in how the Scottish Government is reflecting, reporting and monitoring the spends that may have less of an immediate return and more of a long-term oneâ.7 PHS also said it is âencouraging that the Scottish Government is now considering how to track spend on preventionâ and that across Government and public finance professionals, there is work going on to produce a workable definition of preventative spend.3
While supporting work to classify and measure prevention, the FAI warned that quantifying prevention is âvery hardâ and that âif you try to categorise everything on whether it really is preventative or not, are you just encouraging people to put that forward in the preventative lens rather than the acute issues lens?â.3
The SFC further argued that more detail is needed in the Scottish Spending Review around âwhat is in the preventative spend bucket, what is in the value-for-money bucket and what is in the efficiency savings bucketâ and how that will be monitored and tracked over time.10
As part of our pre-budget scrutiny last year, the Committee asked the Scottish Government to consider and report back on the potential benefits, risks and costs of introducing a new category of public expenditure on preventative spend, which we were told establishes a benchmark and enables investment to be tracked over time. The Committee seeks an update on progress with this work.
As noted above, the Scottish Government is publishing the outcomes of its first comprehensive Scottish Spending Review since 2011 alongside the Scottish Budget 2026-27 in January 2026. In its 2017 report, the Budget Process Review Group (BPRG) recommended that the Scottish Government publishes a framework document for each Scottish Spending Review which should set out the economic and political context, the criteria which will govern the assessment of budgets, and the process and timetable for the review.1Ěý
The framework for this yearâs Scottish Spending Review was set out as part of the 2025 MTFS.2 The Committee sought to explore during evidence to what extent the framework meets the BPRGâs recommendations on content and timescales as well as what the priorities for the Review should be. The Committee received evidence suggesting that the framework broadly meets the expectations of the BPRG, although there were some concerns regarding the time available for this work following the UK Spending Review in June.3
While there were also some questions around the value of the exercise being so close to the Scottish Parliament elections, most witnesses said that the Review is important in setting the scene for debate around the priorities for the next Parliament. The SFCâs 2025 Fiscal Update notes that the Scottish Spending Review should provide âa meaningful basis for informed debate by all political parties on how the fiscal challenges the Scottish Government faces can be addressedâ, given implementing the Review âwill mainly be the responsibility of the Scottish Government and Scottish Parliament elected in May 2026â.4
During evidence, the SFC went on to say that the Spending Review is âa pivotal moment and a milestone for the public finances, not just in this session of the Parliament but for future sessionsâ, adding that it provides âan important opportunity [âŚ] to address immediate budget pressures and, crucially, long-term fiscal sustainability challengesâ.5
One of the key issues raised with the Committee was the need for the Scottish Spending Review to be comprehensive, with some witnesses advocating a zero-based budgeting approach, in line with our previous recommendation to the Government. The SFC told us that âthe spending review process is as important as the numbers themselvesâ, while the FAI suggested that zero-based budgeting âcertainly has broad support across the UK and is the way things are meant to be delivered in spending reviewsâ.5
Witnesses also told us that the Review should set out how the ambitions in the MTFS will be realised along with more detail on prioritisation of its spending plans. This includes detail on how the planned workforce reductions, efficiencies and reforms in the public sector as set out in the PSR Strategy and FSDP will be achieved.3
As in previous years, witnesses such as the SCVO, called for the Scottish Government to take a âmulti-year spending outlookâ to provide certainty and efficiencies to the public sector and voluntary organisations.8 We note that three-year budgets are the norm in Lithuania, with flexibility in the second and third years.
Asked whether the Scottish Government would take a zero-based budgeting approach to the Scottish Spending Review, the Cabinet Secretary for FLG suggested that âeverything should be challengedâ. A Scottish Government official confirmed that âwe are going through every level 4 in every portfolio in relation to areas of spendâ, with further interrogation of individual portfolio plans taking place over the summer. He explained that work on the Scottish Spending Review began when it became clear that a UK Spending Review would take place and has âramped upâ since the outcomes of that process became available in June.5
The Cabinet Secretary for FLG went on to say that âessentially, you will see where the priorities are in terms of the envelopes and growth of fundingâ. She added that âevery part of the public sector will be looked at in terms of the contribution that it can make [and âŚ] we need to interrogate spend to ensure that it is delivering [and], where spend is delivering, we need to ensure that it continuesâ.10
The Committee remains of the view that a zero-based budgeting approach should be taken in the Scottish Spending Review. As part of the Scottish Government's response to this Report, we seek in-depth information on the process for preparing, scrutinising and delivering the Review.
We agree with the SFC that the Review provides an opportunity for the Scottish Government to set out how it will address Scotlandâs long-term fiscal sustainability challenges. We would also like to see further details of how it is directing spending toward its priorities, including what areas are being deprioritised, and how it plans to meet its ambitions for workforce reductions and public sector efficiencies.
In the context of long-term fiscal pressures, the Committee heard strong representations from the bodies representing colleges, universities and small businesses that skills must be a significant focus of Government to support economic growth, including through maximising participation in the labour market and growing the tax base. It was also considered important to align economic growth spending to gaps in skills and labour market needs, with more resource needed to support those furthest from the workforce to gain new skills, reskill or upskill.1
Colleges Scotland highlighted Audit Scotland figures showing that almost ÂŁ1 in ÂŁ5 (17%) has been removed from the college sectorâs budget over the past three years, which has had âa devastating impact on the ability to deliver skills at a time when the capacity needs to increaseâ. It noted that colleges are well-placed to support those furthest from the workforce to get back into work and to reskill and upskill those returning to the labour market or who have been made redundant. The National Transition Training Fund introduced by the Scottish Government in 2020 in response to the economic impact of Covid-19, was cited by Colleges Scotland as offering âa delivery model which can be re-employed to increase labour market participation in key sectors for Scotland and grow the tax base as a resultâ.2
Scottish Enterprise highlighted evidence from the Keep Britain Working Review published in March 2025 suggesting that health-related conditions, disability and ageing are major drivers of economic inactivity. Scottish Enterprise suggested some ways of recruiting and retaining older workers including encouraging employers to reimagine job design and embed flexible and phased retirement options across their workforce through large-scale trials. This, it argued, âwill help to build robust evidence and catalyse a culture shift across industriesâ. Its other suggestions include incentivising employers to recruit, retain and retrain older workers and launching a national campaign to tackle age bias and promote fair work.3
We also heard from the STUC that the Scottish Government should invest in health spending and employment support to assist people with ill-health or disabilities to re-enter the labour force.4
Concerns were raised during evidence regarding the impact of staff shortages in some sectors. The Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) highlighted that a third of small businesses are having recruitment challenges; of that third, 20% have had to reduce the services that they offer due to staff shortages. The FSB suggested this is having âa real knock-on effect on small businesses, on the income that they are able to generate and, on their ability, to maintain their other staffâ.1
The Scottish Federation of Housing Associations (SFHA) highlighted shortages in the trades and construction sector making it difficult to meet targets relating to affordable housing.1 This, Colleges Scotland argued, shows that the college sector should be involved in discussions around the skills needed and how to deliver them at the outset of policy development, such as targets on affordable housing.1
The FAI noted that skills matching and investment in retraining will be particularly important due to the transition to net zero.8 In addition, Registers of Scotland is calling for the Scottish Governmentâs labour market strategy to be updated (last update was August 2016), to reflect the labour market post Covid-19.9 We also heard that better careers advice is required so that young people understand where the opportunities will be.1
There was recognition from Universities Scotland that âwhat we will be delivering to meet the needs of the economy and Scottish society is not necessarily what we have been delivering, or certainly not in the way that we have delivered it in recent decadesâ. It called on the Scottish Government to âcreate a policy and funding environment that gives universities the scope to flexibly respond to Scotlandâs skills needs, which could in turn make a significant contribution to increasing labour market participationâ. This includes having more flexibility within graduate apprenticeships to respond to employer needs and offering better support for employers to retain international graduates in Scotland.11
Universities Scotland is seeking discussions with Government and others on the future of the sector and how it can be more efficient and effective. In the meantime, it is arguing for an âinjection of fundingâ into core teaching and core research âto help steady the shipâ and create âsome space to look at how we can be more innovative and more effectiveâ. It is also looking for resource funding to be found within the 2026-27 budget âto create a multi-year transformation or spend-to-save fund for universities at a scale capable of supporting multiple institutions to make their own strategic investments in transformation, long-term efficiency, greater collaboration and shared servicesâ.11
The STUC argued for devolution of powers relating to migration and employment law to Scotland and opportunities for Scottish involvement in key cross-border institutions and decision-making bodies âto ensure Scotlandâs specific population challenges are heard at a UK levelâ. It hopes these measures would help with vacancies and skills gaps and growing the tax base.4
The Cabinet Secretary for FLG also recognised that many sectors need more workers and that it is a âmajor impedimentâ not having levers around migration. She noted however that âwe still have net immigration to Scotland from the rest of the UK across all tax bandsâ adding âthat is a good thing, but we would like to do more in that space, because there are sectors that want to recruitâ.14
The Committee asks the Scottish Government to maximise opportunities for better aligning skills with the needs of Scotlandâs economy, including supporting fit-for-future funding models for colleges and universities and careers advice. The Committee notes the impact of social security spending on other budgets, such as colleges.
We also seek further information on how the Scottish Government is supporting organisations to retain and attract older workers and those with disabilities to increase labour market participation and grow the tax base.
Improving procurement processes and minimising regulation were other issues raised as having the potential to help support economic growth.
The FSB highlighted an opportunity through the Community and Wealth Building (Scotland) Bill to ensure that procurement spend with small businesses is maximised. This, it noted, ârepresents a clear opportunity to boost economic growth without specifically allocating capital spendâ.1
The FSB further highlighted data showing that over a 10th of Scottish small businesses are spending over eight hours a week on regulatory compliance. It is therefore suggesting âcombining a reduction of strategy and consultation documents with assessing the disproportionate impact of new policies on small businesses through comprehensive [small business-focused] Business and Regulatory Impact Assessments.1
The Committee seeks details of the steps the Scottish Government is taking to ensure that the devolved regulatory framework and procurement arrangements for small businesses are fair and proportionate.
According toĚýThe Productivity InstituteĚýâproductivity growth in Scotland, mirroring the rest of the UK, has been very weak, registering a 1.0% annual increase in the 2008 to 2023 periodâ.1ĚýThe SFC suggested that productivity growth in Scotland will be 1.3% a year until 2035-36, and 1.5% a year thereafter.2 This mirrors the OBRâs assumptions for the UK. The Committee explored with witnesses how Scotlandâs productivity could be increased to support economic growth.
The FAI told us that âaddressing poor productivity performance, and the drag it exerts on private sector wagesâ, would be the most effective way to grow the tax base.3 Both the FAI and Scottish Enterprise highlighted one of the drivers of low productivity growth as low capital investment, which has stagnated in the UK for the past 20 years.,
Scottish Enterprise research into barriers to increasing Scotlandâs productivity identifies the need to (1) invest in capital, (2) shift attitudes to risk and take a long-term view, (3) adopt a joined-up approach across Scotland and the UK, and (4) ensure availability of the âright skillsâ. Scottish Enterprise noted the OBRâs baseline assumption that a permanent 1% increase in public investment increases output by 2.4% in the long term, along with Resolution Foundation analysis that this level of investment would raise GDP by around 4.9%.4
We also heard from Scottish Enterprise that while strong leadership is seen to enhance productivity, there is significant underinvestment in developing leadership skills particularly amongst small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). It also told us that SMEs are less willing than foreign investors to take on risk.5 The FSB explained most SMEs âdo not see approaching enterprise agencies such as Scottish Enterprise or the Scottish National Investment Bank as an option because, when they look at the Governmentâs strategy and priorities, the focus is on unicorns, tech scalers and high-growth companiesâ.5 We heard from witnesses including South Lanarkshire Council that digital infrastructure can boost productivity, and that supporting research and development hubs and boosting industrial and commercial space should be priorities.7
Lithuania has a significant amount of start-up businesses as well as three unicornsi âwith more breedingâ, which the Lithuanian Parliamentâs Committee on Economics suggested âis a huge achievement in a small countryâ. Following Brexit, the country positioned itself as âthe gateway to the EUâ for FinTech. They also had a large talent pool after many banks left the country. The sector has been particularly successful with nearly 300 companies employing around 8000 people. Most FinTech companies in Lithuania are foreign (around 70%) but their offices and workers are based locally. Lithuanian universities are already providing FinTech and IT courses but the sector needs experience for high-value jobs and is therefore attracting workers from abroad. We heard there is a high level of worker retention in the sector.
The Committee requests further details of how the Scottish Government is creating the right conditions for businesses in Scotland to grow, take a long-term view, invest in capital and leadership, and change attitudes to risk, which we heard are key barriers to productivity growth.
We also seek more information on how high-value businesses, such as in the FinTech sector, are being supported to âscale upâ including into unicorns.
The Committee previously expressed concern regarding the reliability of data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) Labour Force Survey (LFS) which informs forecasts affecting the Scottish Budget. We explored this issue further during pre-budget scrutiny.
The SFC told us that the LFS should provide âreally rich dataâ on employment, unemployment, and the drivers for economic inactivity, however, âthe problem at the moment is that the data is just not fit for purpose, [and] we cannot trust itâ. It went on to note that âpolicymaking depends on really good data and the statistics around itâ but âwhen the data becomes something that we genuinely do not believe, we are flying blind to an extentâ.1 We also heard from the FAI that âthe labour market statistics situation is a real worryâ as âwe can know a bit from the real-time information from HMRC, but that is not a complete data setâ. The FAI suggested, âit is an area where people are driving without all the directions and with some of the windscreen obstructedâ.2
We heard that the SFC has moved to using real-time information data from HMRC to inform its forecasts for tax revenues, as the LFS data at Scotland level âhas been hard to use for a long timeâ, while the OBR continues to use LFS data. The SFC explained therefore âwe are not comparing like with likeâ and this âcreates a challenge in understanding how well we are performing in forecastingâ. The SFC also made a broader point, that this unreliability in data can erode trust in the evidence and statistics that inform policymaking.1
The SFC is currently working with the University of Strathclyde to move towards ânowcastingâ, which it said would âgive us much more sophisticated measures that can help us to track how the economy is doing in the near termâ.1
During our fact-finding visit in September, we heard that the State Data Agency in Lithuania uses a range of methods to gather data, including supplementing administrative data through telephone, internet, and face-to-face interviews. The organisation provides incentives to respondents participating in statistical surveys on a voluntary basis. Labour force survey response rates in Lithuania sit at broadly 75%. This compares to recent response rates to the ONS Labour Force Survey of around 20%.
The Committee remains concerned at the lack of reliable labour force data from the ONS which impacts on the Scottish Budget and means the Scottish Government is unable to carry out evidence-informed policymaking on the labour market in Scotland. This issue has persisted for far too long. We therefore ask the Scottish Government to make representations to the UK Statistics Agency with a view to resolving this issue as early as possible.
We urge the Scottish Government to explore with the FAI and SFC the potential for ânowcastingâ on the economy to fill this vacuum and support evidence-based decisions on the labour market in future.
In relation to the Scottish Governmentâs capital budget, the 2025 MTFS states thatâ
The 4.3% real-terms reduction in the UK capital block grant over the period 2022-23 to 2024-25 led to changes to delivery timescales for some projects in the 2024 Infrastructure Investment Plan (IiP) and an increase in backlog maintenance.
The increase to the block grant in the 2025-26 Scottish Budget âonly restored funding to 2023-24 levels in real terms and was insufficient to meet all our infrastructure needsâ.
The capital block grant is expected to remain broadly flat at around ÂŁ6.65 billion between 2026-27 and 2029-30, a 1.1% decrease in real terms over this period. However, âwhen accounting for the Scottish Governmentâs capital borrowing policy and one-off-nature of ScotWind revenues, our overall CDEL budget is forecast to fall by 9.3% over the same periodâ.
The Scottish Governmentâs capital spending is forecast to exceed its available budget by ÂŁ1.1 billion in 2026-27, rising to ÂŁ2.1 billion in 2029-30 without further action.1
The FSDP does not include actions âto set the capital programme on a sustainable path [âŚ] because [âŚ] the Scottish Government will publish a new IiP [ in January 2026âŚ] which will be informed by the multi-year capital allocations underpinning the Scottish Spending Reviewâ.2 An IiP pipeline is being published at the same time.
As noted earlier in this report, the Committee has expressed its ongoing concerns regarding repeated delays to the refreshed IiP pipeline originally expected in December 2023. During pre-budget scrutiny, the Committee explored the implications of capital budget trends, witnessesâ priorities for capital expenditure, and options that might be available to the Scottish Government to maximise spending potential.
The SFC explained that there will be âa huge boost to capital spending in 2025-26, but it will tail off so that it becomes largely flat in cash terms and then it will start to fall in real termsâ. It noted that the challenge in âhaving big, lumpy injections of capital that needs to be spent quickly in relatively short time periods [âŚ] is that you end up driving up prices in a lot of the investment that you are doingâ. It also highlighted, while the Scottish Government has some levers to smooth out this type of spending, gradual capital growth is more efficient.3
Audit Scotland suggested that the Scottish Government should produce clear information that explains how it has decided to prioritise, delay or cancel projects in the IiP and as part of decisions it makes over the medium term as the capital budget changes.4 Both Audit Scotland and the FAI also noted that a systematic prioritisation exercise should be taking place, recognising that shovel-ready projects aligned to the Governmentâs priorities and the benefits it wishes to achieve could be started quickly and potentially deliver most impact.5
Other witnesses spoke about their priorities for capital funding. This included housing, which the SFHA argued is âa massive enabler of economic growthâ, and âis something that has probably been underappreciated, especially in certain parts of the country where there is a real lack of affordable housingâ. The SFHA argued in its submission that âa crucial part of adapting to an ageing population will be ensuring that homes are accessible to peopleâs needs to help them live well and independently, and that the right conditions are in place to provide specialist housing to those who need itâ. It also advocates a focus on technology-enabled care.6
COSLA, SOLACE and the Directors of Finance also called for housing to be prioritised for capital expenditure, as well as critical infrastructure, noting that these drive economic growth and contribute to other national priorities like reducing child poverty and homelessness, and tackling climate change.7 The FAI suggested that capital spending should be focused on those areas where the market is likely to âunderprovideâ.8 Examples include infrastructure spending like road and rail connections, and housing. As noted above, investment in skills is another important area, as businesses have lowered their investment over time. The STUC argued that, as well as prioritising social housing, decarbonising the economy should also benefit from capital spend.9
The Committee asks the Scottish Government to set out as part of its long-awaited Infrastructure Investment Plan and pipeline, which we have been requesting for the last two years, what steps it will take to smooth out the âlumpyâ capital budget over time.
We also agree with Audit Scotland and the FAI that the Scottish Government should, where possible, focus its plans on shovel-ready projects based around its priorities.
The Cabinet Secretary for FLG said she is disappointed that the Scottish block grant is âdeclining compared to that in UK Government departmentsâ, adding âthe overall direction of capital is disappointing, to say the leastâ. She explained that the Scottish Government is therefore âvery exercised at the moment about how we can expand the capital envelope through other meansâ.1
She highlighted opportunities including âoutcomes-based fundingâ through individual local authorities, such as the Granton housing project in Edinburgh, and strategic use of the local government pension fund (which is valued at around ÂŁ67 billion). In relation to bonds, the Scottish Government is continuing with the due diligence process set out in the 2025-26 Scottish Budget and has committed to providing further updates as that work progresses.1
For housing, the Scottish Government is levering in private sector investment in mid-market rent, which the Cabinet Secretary indicates will be âa big contributor to affordable housingâ.1
The Committee looks forward to receiving further information on the due diligence taking place to assess options currently being considered by the Scottish Government âto expand the capital envelopeâ.
The third pillar of the MTFS1 and FSDP2 is on taxation, specifically âensuring a strategic approach to tax revenues, which considers the longer-term impact of our tax choices and competitivenessâ.
The MTFS states that the Scottish Governmentâs decisions on income tax since devolution are estimated to have raised up to ÂŁ1.7 billion in 2025-26 when compared to if it had implemented the same rates and bands as in the rest of the UK.1 The MTFS and FSDP highlight the following two key measures that âwill support fiscal sustainabilityâ
âPriorities to improve the operation and performance of the existing tax system â in addition to stability for Income Tax [âŚ], key areas of focus include working with Local Government, and completing the devolution of remaining taxes
Future tax reform to deliver sustainable and growing tax revenues â exploring opportunities for reform and devolution of tax powers needed to continue to deliver sustainable and growing tax revenues in the future.â12
The FSDP highlights specific actions under these measures. These include exploring the creation of more revenue-generating powers for local authorities, implementing new devolved taxes, reviewing the operation of existing taxes, expanding the evidence base for Scottish income tax, and strengthening its approach to Scottish tax compliance.2
The Chartered Institute of Taxation noted completing devolution of the remaining taxes is a priority for the Government but questioned whether this is supported by a cost/benefit analysis. It cited the Scottish Aggregates Tax as an example where devolution has âcreated additional complexity related to cross border transactionsâ, but that the estimated revenues to be raised by imports of aggregates into Scotland from rUK is only around ÂŁ166,400.7
Oxfam Scotland called for further income tax reform to make the system more proportional, and for the replacement of council tax with a Proportional Property Tax (starting with a revaluation of all domestic properties). It has also called for a wealth tax, and for local business taxes to better incentivise employers to promote fair work and emissions reductions.8
We also heard from the STUC that Scotland needs more tax revenue.9 In its publication âTaxing Wealth for a Fairer and Greener Scotlandâ, the STUC argued that âfairer taxes on wealth at UK and Scotland levels must be at the heart of this package of reforms to invest in and drive progress towards a fairer, greener and more prosperous futureâ.10
Asked for an update on progress regarding the Air Departure Tax (ADT) and VAT assignment, given both are referred to in the MTFS, Scottish Government officials explained that high-level principles for ADT have been published to help shape further policy developments. The Cabinet Secretary said that discussions on ADT âare progressing well [and] we will come back with a timeframe that we think is realisticâ.11
On VAT assignment, she confirmed that âit is neither our intention, nor that of the UK Government, to move forward with that because of the inability to resolve the risksâ. However, âif the UK Government was to turn around tomorrow and say that it will give us responsibility over VAT full stop, that would be a very different matterâ.11
During our fact-finding visit to Lithuania, we heard about the countryâs simplified approach to taxation, with income tax ranging from 26% to 32%, not dissimilar to the approach we previously explored in Estonia where there is a flat 22% tax on individual income.
The Cabinet Secretary for FLG acknowledged that the more people understand the tax system, the higher the compliance rates. She also recognised there is some complexity in the system, and highlighted work being carried out by the Scottish Government to raise awareness of âwhat the Scottish tax system is and what peopleâs obligations are, because we want to drive high levels of compliance with that systemâ. She further highlighted that the Scottish Government has provided stability on income tax levels for the remainder of this parliamentary session.11
The Committee welcomes the Cabinet Secretaryâs assurances that neither the UK Government nor Scottish Government plan to pursue VAT assignment, given the risks and complexities this could bring to the Scottish Budget.
We request further information on the Scottish Governmentâs plans to review the operation of existing taxes, including timescales.
In our recent Report on the Scottish Budget process, the Committee restated our position that there would be merit in carrying out a wider review of how the fiscal framework between the UK and Scottish governments is operating, including how adjustments based on relative growth with the rest of the UK impact on income tax revenues in Scotland.1 During pre-budget 2026-27 scrutiny, we explored the specific issue of whether the fiscal framework provides sufficient flexibility to manage forecast error.
The reconciliation to be applied to the 2026-27 Scottish Budget has now been confirmed as +ÂŁ406 million, based on outturn data for 2023-24 showing strong growth in Scottish income tax revenues which was faster than in the rest of the UK. However, the indicative reconciliation figure for the 2027-28 Scottish Budget is estimated to be -ÂŁ851 million.2 If confirmed, this figure would exceed Scottish Government borrowing limits for managing forecast errors under the fiscal framework. Following the updates to the fiscal framework in August 20233, this limit is uprated by inflation annually and in 2027-28 is estimated to be ÂŁ666 million. Annual inflationary increases also apply to the annual and cumulative caps on the Scotland Reserve.
The SFC noted that larger negative reconciliations could happen more regularly, explaining that the âhuge growth in nominal income tax revenues ⌠means that even the slightest error matters moreâ. It suggested that while the Scottish Government could add more money in the Scotland Reserve to draw down to offset negative reconciliations, âthe limit on the size of the Reserve has become a binding constraint, too, so there is rather limited room to adjust for these big numbersâ. This, the SFC suggested, âis where constant reviewing of the fiscal framework to see how it is operating and working entirely makes senseâ, adding there may be an argument for scaling the borrowing limit and the Scotland Reserve to a metric other than inflation.4
The FAI noted âan interesting characteristic of the fiscal framework [is] that the greater devolution of tax has caused the Scottish Governmentâs budget to be more linked with UK conditions rather than less, because what matters is the net position between the tax revenues raised in Scotland and the forecast for that, and the forecasts for England and Northern Ireland revenues that the OBR doesâ. This, it recognises, makes it more difficult for the Scottish Government to plan.5
We also heard from the SFC that there is a tendency in Scotland to align every payment and tax with its UK equivalent. It cited the example of the Scottish Government following the UK Governmentâs lead in making cuts to the winter fuel payment, decisions which have since been reversed. However, it suggested that other reforms âwill lead to the UK version and the Scottish equivalents getting further and further apart, which is not necessarily a bad thing if it means that we start thinking of the Scottish budget in its own right rather than always thinking about it relative to the UK budgetâ. The SFC added that Scotland has never been in the position where a tax that has been devolved no longer exists and discussions would need to take place on how that would work if it happened.4
The Cabinet Secretary for FLG told the Committee that the Scottish Government âwill monitor the situation very carefully and work with the Treasury on the borrowing limit for a worst-case scenarioâ, adding âgiven the level of volatility, I suspect that the figure will changeâI hope, in a positive directionâbut we will work with the Treasury on contingenciesâ.4
She confirmed that the Scottish Government is pursuing with HM Treasury the potential for a more fundamental review of the fiscal framework to take place as early as possible rather than waiting until the formal review period in 2028. She further highlighted some âsmall improvementsâ that could be made more quickly, such as increased limits for borrowing and the Scotland Reserve.4
Asked for an update on progress regarding the planned fiscal framework with Local Government, the Cabinet Secretary for FLG indicated on 30 September that, while there was agreement on 95% of the issues under discussion, views differed regarding rules-based budgeting. She said she had written asking councils âto agree on the 95% so that we can codify elements of the frameworkâ ahead of discussions on the Scottish Budget 2026-27.9
In a subsequent joint letter copied to the Committee dated 10 October, the Cabinet Secretary for FLG and Councillor Katie Hagmann advised that the Scottish Government and COSLA have now agreed the first iteration of the fiscal framework between Scottish Government and Local Government. They stated this âsets out a statement of our collective intent for how we are working together ahead of the Scottish Budget 2026-27 and Spending Reviewâ. The letter goes on to say that, given the framework is already being applied in practice, there will be little noticeable change in day-to-day relationships, but âit does provide a strong signal of our intent to continue to invest in the relationship between Scottish Government, COSLA and councils over the coming monthsâ.10
The Committee supports the Cabinet Secretaryâs request to HM Treasury to carry out an early review of the fiscal framework, before the formal review period in 2028. This early review should consider how adjustments based on relative growth with the rest of the UK impact on income tax revenues in Scotland and whether it provides sufficient flexibility to manage forecast error.
We ask that lessons are learned from the August 2023 fiscal framework update, to enable the process for the next review to be as open and transparent as possible to support robust parliamentary scrutiny.
We welcome the recent announcement that agreement has been reached on a fiscal framework between the Scottish Government and Local Government and trust this places constructive budgetary discussions on a firm footing.