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Devolution and the UKs fiscal constitution

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Title: Devolution and the UKs fiscal constitution


1
Devolution and the UKs fiscal constitution
  • Presentation for seminar on Regional Economic
    Disparities and Territorial Justice, 10-11 April
    2008
  • Alan Trench
  • School of Law, University of Edinburgh

2
What is the fiscal constitution
  • All decentralised or federal states have several
    levels of govt responsible for delivering
    services and paying for those services
  • The fiscal constitution is concerned with the
    relationship between these, and how that works
    given the division of powers between levels of
    government
  • Therefore not purely concerned with tax and
    revenues (orthodox meaning), or the territorial
    distribution of funds (McLeans meaning) - but
    also with which govt spends public money and on
    what sorts of services
  • And with how each govt is funded (whether by
    own-source revenues, grants, equalisation systems
    or what), and what the source of revenues means
    for the autonomy of govts and for the experiences
    of individual citizens (therefore linked to ideas
    of social citizenship, and the level/tiers of
    govt for that)

3
Devolution and the fiscal constitution
  • The UKs fiscal constitution pre-devolution was
    partly that of a unitary state (single economy,
    tax system, benefits system and public finances),
    but also territorially differentiated in delivery
    of public services (characteristic of a union
    state)
  • Seen in different ways by different disciplines
  • With devolution, the UK acquired a more complex
    and decentralised fiscal constitution some
    functions (distributive ones) devolved, others
    (redistributive) reserved
  • Devolved admins. only account for around 50-55
    per cent of total public spending in Sc/W/NI
  • But there is much overlap between devolved and
    non-devolved functions (cf GERS table 3.5) as
    well as interplay between them
  • And the block grant and formula system ties
    devolved administrations tightly into the UK
    system

4
What sort of shares of social spending do
Scotland, Wales, NI get?
5
The territorial distribution of funding
  • By and large, Scotland and Wales get larger per
    capita shares of public spending than their
    population shares would merit
  • Indeed, they bat above their weight in
    practically all areas and most English regions
    bat below their weight (cf PESA table 9.12)
  • And in Scotland's case, than need would appear
    to imply (given high per capita GVA)
  • But curiously of the high-spending policy fields
    (education, health, social protection) its the
    largely reserved social protection that shows the
    widest gap in other words, its a mainly
    UK-controlled function that continues to be most
    generous to Wales and NI (if not Scotland)
  • And this amounts to a substantial form of
    redistribution that flows to W NI but on an
    interpersonal not intergovernmental basis

6
How devolution was supposed to work on a UK level
  • No-one seems very clear about how devolution was
    meant to work at the UK level
  • 3 possible models
  • Different administration of common services
  • A national voice
  • A democratic bulwark against a return of
    mandate-less Conservative UK Govt (which would
    imply something approaching a federal
    arrangement)
  • Laboru probably intended a combination of 1st 2
    in 1997 (and choice of Barnett reflects that)
  • However, institutionally it didnt deliver any of
    these

7
What devolution actually did
  • Wholly devolve most distributive welfare state
    functions
  • Retain at UK level most redistributive functions
  • With no clear rationale for that at least, none
    clearly communicated
  • And modest use of limited intergovt/UK-wide
    institutions and processes even though there was
    extensive overlap between devolved and
    non-devolved functions
  • But a serious gap between expectations and
    reality in a number of respects, including
    economic performance and better/more open
    government
  • And all this creates problems, as he model of
    policy overlaps, permissive autonomy and
    informal consensual IGR no longer works

8
Thinking constitutionally about finance
  • Need to think about three aspects of finance
  • Inter-territorial (what we do now)
  • Inter-governmental (what GERS helps us do)
  • Inter-personal with regional effects
  • Need to be conscious how decisions by one level
    of govt affect those of others and ensure that
    the allocation of powers/functions takes that
    into account
  • Onus of that on UK Govt, as largest govt (for E)
    as well as for reserved matters
  • Need for clearer (less entangled) data GERW and
    GERNI (GER-RegE) as well as GERS

9
Policy overlaps
  • The most important ones relate to how social
    security system interacts with other aspects of
    the welfare state (though there is also the
    economic development role of the dev. admins)
  • System has become more centralised (UK-wide,
    and entrenched) since 1997, thanks to tax credits
  • On one hand, social security appears generally to
    treat Sc, W NI well
  • But attempts to target benefit precisely, based
    on the welfare state as it works in England,
    limit what the devolved can do
  • Examples Long-term care for the elderly and
    attendance allowance, proposed local income tax
    and council tax benefit

10
The implications of policy overlaps
  • If the result is policy dysfunction, that doesnt
    just mean making bad policy. It also inhibit
    govts from doing their work generally which has
    implications for legitimacy of government as well
    as policy-making
  • If they prevent either level of govt delivering
    its package of policies, they prevent either
    level being the focus of social citizenship
    also with implications for legitimacy
  • If they constrain devolved autonomy (which the
    public believe is good), they call into question
    the point of devolution as a political project
    altogether
  • As well as confusion about democratic
    accountability

11
What does that mean?
  • Need to think in terms of the fiscal
    constitution, and the broad perspective that
    entails
  • Need to think hard about the structure of
    devolution, about both the powers and functions
    of each level of govt, and the financial system
    to support that
  • That probably implies a need for greater
    separation in functions, and clarity in that
  • As well as at least a measure of fiscal autonomy
  • And a cruder, less targeted welfare state to
    permit more room for local variation in policy
  • Which could exist in several variants certainly
    Labour and Conservative could take different
    approaches
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