Alex Salmond’s plans for a currency union should Scotland vote for independence have suffered another setback.
Alex Salmond’s plans for a currency union should Scotland vote for independence have suffered another setback as one of his former economic advisers admitted that the difficulties in establishing such a union with the rest of the UK would likely prove too difficult to achieve.
Speaking to the Scottish Parliament’s Finance Committee, professor John Kay, a former member of the first minister’s Council of Economic Advisers, noted that conventional wisdom, particularly in the eurozone, is that there can only be currency union if this leads to fiscal backing.
He told MSPs on the Committee:
“Personally I don’t think that’s true but there’s almost not much point in our debating whether that’s true or not, because people in markets and political circles believe it’s true.
“The result of that is that if Scotland voted for independence and we were to have negotiations over monetary union, you would be getting conditions laid down by the UK Treasury in these negotiations which I think would be very difficult for a Scottish Government to accept.”
He continued:
“The rest of the UK would be demanding control over the banking system in Scotland and over fiscal policy in Scotland which it would not be willing to concede.
“That’s the almost intractable problem on which these negotiations would fail.
“If Scotland agreed to the UK demands it would be giving away most of the “economic policy levers it hoped to gain by independence.”
The Committee, currently taking evidence about what Scotland’s finances might look like if it votes for independence, also heard from Gavin McCrone, a former chief economist at the Scottish Office, who was equally pessimistic about the prospects of the SNP securing a currency union.
Telling MSPs that he felt it was “more likely in the end” that Scotland would adopt its own currency “even though it may start with an attempt to keep the same currency”, McCrone continued:
“On the whole, I think that a separate currency but one pegged to sterling is the probably the long-run answer, that’s what the Irish did for a long time, then they unpegged it when they went into the European exchange rate mechanism.
“Smaller countries very often do that, the Danes for example have kept their own currency but it is pegged to the euro, but that means they can alter it if they really have to.”
15 Responses to “Former Salmond advisor casts doubt on currency union”
RolftheGanger
John Kay is and always has been Unionist. Check back previous criticism of the SNP Government.
He did not “admit” anything – he made another criticism.
Kryten2k35
That’s not what the SNP is saying.
uglyfatbloke
Possibly ‘cos he’s not really a salmon after all? Cod knows we’ve been herring enough crab from both sides; no wonder they’re both floundering all over the plaice.
rollo_tommasi
Interesting that you attack the man not the argument yet not in the least bit suprising.
Alec
So, only pro-YES Scots (or outsiders like Billy Bragg) can have an opinion. Perhaps you should have said that the SNP and YEScotland’s favoured blogger thinks it’s not possible to consider yourself Scottish and British or that the Hillsborough 96 were to blame for their deaths, then one of your lot would have seen it as an unhinged rant (not to mention a lie, except for the bits which were 100% accurate).
There is going to be no currency union.
Welcome to an advanced liberal democracy. We’re allowed to criticize Governments. Which flight are you catching to Moscow?
~alec