Meeting of the Parliament 11 June 2026 [Last updated 19:16]
I will be delighted to cover that, because there are some insights that I was able to glean when I was a minister in the UK Government. Those are part of the reason why I left the Conservative Party, so I will come to that issue directly.
The £117 billion spent in Scotland is 55 per cent of GDP. In the UK, total spending is 44 per cent, going to 45 per cent, of GDP, so Scotland is spending considerably more per capita than England. The exam question is, are we getting better public services? Are our schools better? Are our hospitals better? Are our roads better? Is our policing better?
New Zealand, which has the same population as Scotland—5.5 million people—spends 42 per cent of GDP versus our 55 per cent, yet its GDP per capita is 10 per cent higher. That tells me that this is not about money. There has not been a shortage of money but a shortage of value for money for the taxpayer. Ivan McKee can intervene on that point.