Robison warns cuts will have âprofound effectâ on services
Cuts to the Scottish governmentâs budget will have a âprofound effectâ on its ability to deliver services, the finance secretary has warned.
Shona Robison also claimed the UK is entering a ânew era of austerityâ under the Labour government at Westminster, ahead of an announcement later where she is expected to confirm massive cuts to public services in Scotland.
Weekend newspaper reports suggested the scale of the cuts could be over ÂŁ500m, with a halt to non-essential spending already in place.
Ms Robison says she has been left with no choice due to UK government cuts that have affected available funding, while Labour claim a âpainfulâ budget in October is needed to combat a âblack holeâ in public finances left by the previous Conservative administration.
âNew era of austerityâ
Ms Robison said: âUnder the Labour government it is clear that we are entering a whole new era of austerity.
âThe cuts that they are proposing to make will have a profound effect on our ability to deliver for the people of Scotland â but [the] SNP government will do everything we can to protect people and public services from the cuts that Westminster is making to our budgetâ.
She added that her governmentâs budget would still be âbalancedâ.
However, a report last week from independent economic forecaster the Scottish Fiscal Commission (SFC) said that âmuch of the pressure comes from the Scottish governmentâs own decisionsâ.
Its report found that a council tax freeze, more generous public sector pay deals than other parts of the UK and social security reforms meant the Scottish government had narrowed âits room for manoeuvre now and in the future.â
The Scottish government have already confirmed the reintroduction of peak rail fares, scrapping free bus travel for asylum seekers, delaying an initiative to provide technology devices such as iPads for people who are âdigitally excludedâ and halting universal winter fuel payments for pensioners.
Environmental groups and Scotlandâs art sector have already expressed concern over the impact on their area.
First Minister John Swinney is expected to address the Scottish Parliament on Wednesday to unveil his first Programme for Government.
At his weekend speech to the SNP conference he said the government needed to work âsmarter and harderâ, but denied the party were introducing austerity in Scotland.
On Monday he told the BBCâs Good Morning Scotland programme that the devolved administration was âliving within its meansâ.
Ms Robison previously told BBC Scotland News that the devolved nations needed more âfiscal flexibilityâ, and that Labourâs Chancellor Rachel Reevesâ cuts were having a knock-on effect on the Scottish budget.
However, Scottish Labourâs finance spokesman Michael Marra accused the SNP of âsecrecy and spinâ regarding the countryâs finances.
He said: âItâs time for the SNP to come clean about the financial chaos it has created and tell us the truth about what lies ahead. The SNP has said âessentialâ jobs would be protected from cuts, but it has failed to say in any way what an âessentialâ job actually is.
âThis incompetence and failure to plan is causing uncertainty for public sector workers and chaos for service leaders, who now need urgent clarityâ.
Scottish Conservatives finance spokeswoman Liz Smith stated that the SNP has created a âhigh tax, low growth environmentâ that should be reversed, and that any further tax rises would be âdevastatingâ.
âTough decisionsâ
The Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Alex Cole-Hamilton said the SNP were in âa messâ because they were focused on independence rather than public services.
He added: âThis statement needs to contain a commitment to growing the economy and a grovelling apology for the amount of money that has been wastedâ.
The Scottish Greens called for the upcoming Programme for Government to have âhuman rights and equality at its heartâ.
A UK government spokeswoman said they were taking âtough decisionsâ to address a ÂŁ22bn hole in public finances left by the previous government.
They added: âWe are committed to working with the Scottish government on our shared priorities to fix the foundations of our economy, so we can rebuild Britain and make every part of the United Kingdom better off.â