Meeting of the Parliament 10 March 2016
It is no secret that, as one of the members of the Finance Committee, I have at no point been convinced that the SFC should do the forecasting. My main reasons for that are that, first, it is fundamentally better to have one organisation to do the work—in this case forecasting—and a separate organisation to check it. That is what happens with audits; both auditors and the SFC look to the future and the past.
Secondly, it will be more resource intensive and therefore more expensive to have such duplication of work. Thirdly, I am not convinced that the Office for Budget Responsibility model is that great—it is certainly in a minority internationally. Finally, the issue of independence and the issue of who does the forecasting are completely separate and should not be conflated.
However, I accept that the bargaining with Westminster over the fiscal framework has meant that we do not have the ideal situation in every case—this being one in which we do not. Although I will vote for amendment 1, if after the election I am returned here and it all goes belly up, I will be standing here to say that I said it would.