head shot of Alec Ross

As today is GERS day and the papers are telling us how shit we are, and as we’re close to significant ten year anniversary – I thought I might try – once again – to counter a tiresome and defeatist (and untrue) narrative.

1) Scotland has been in a Union for 317 years. Devolution is 25 years old. Westminster has been at the wheel of the economy for 95% of that time and still controls all the economic levers that matter. If it’s a catastrophe, it’s entirely their fault.

2) The whole point of GERS is to make Scotland look feckless, irresponsible, poor, wee, stupid and, frankly, a bit crap. Ian Lang didn’t quite put it like that, but that’s the gist of his leaked memo to Margaret Thatcher.

3) The black hole is a total fallacy because the target deficit isn’t zero. It isn’t even close to zero. Every country in the world runs a deficit. Deficits are good things. Deficits help growth. The real deficit is the one between the target and actual – which may be 1bn (as it was in the UK in 2010 when the deficit was bigger than the GDP, although strangely nobody suggested that the UK couldn’t be independent). Plus, it’s not like we’re gifted the money. WM borrow in our name and then send us the bill. Pooling and sharing. Better Together. It also takes no account of things that we wouldn’t pay for after independence (nuclear submarines, £2bn less on conventional defence spending) because we wouldn’t need to.

4) Related to this, GERS says precisely zero about what an independent Scotland would look like because it assumes that an independent Scotland would act, fiscally, exactly how it had done as part of UK. That’s clearly insane, as if it did there’s no point in being independent. The whole point of the cause is to be able to do things differently.

5) GERS takes no account of Brexit. Next Indyref (assuming there is one – we may not need one, at least not in the way people think, to gain our self-governance, but that’s a different conversation for another day) will probably be “out UK and in EU” or “in UK and out EU”, which the WM and ScotGov impact reports demonstrate to be two completely different outcomes.

The GERS thing is important and interesting (and bollocks). It’s like 2014 – we spent our time countering stuff that wasn’t true which left us little time to make the case. We are far, far too nice and way too reticent. If we aren’t for independence, what are we for? The only reason the Tories made gains in 2017 is because they made it about independence and we didn’t. I genuinely think that GERS, and other things, means that we put independence front and centre of absolutely everything. That way we own the narrative, the debate. I’d also suggest we stick to something very simple. Like, should Scotland be independent? Simple. Start from there. The rest is a distraction, noise.

Ten years, people. High time we got going.

head and shoulders of Alec Ross


8 responses to “Stands Scotland where it did ?”

  1. Brilliant and timely.

  2. Always a good article for a laugh and a cast iron reason to remain in the Union. With people like you keeping the
    embarrassment at Holyrood in power over the years, Scotland has become a much diminished country.

    1. Diminished because of dinosaurs like you. We sent £87billion to Westminster in 2022 and got £42billin back. That’s £45billion they kept of Scottish taxes that’s over 50% of yours and mines taxes we will never see. But your okay with that, what if your next door neighbour demanded that from you? Bet you wouldn’t be so happy then.

      1. Nationalists seem to live in a fantasy land where reality is trumped by a visceral hatred of all things British.
        Scotland is not a wealthy country and it’s economy, health service and education system are being damaged by an incompetent Holyrood Government.

    2. You didn’t read it, did you?

      If you did, you didn’t understand it.

    3. The Uk as a whole has been hugely diminished in my lifetime (72 years) and that has nothing to do with Holyrood. We pretend we are a world power and the best friend of the USA. Obviously fantasy. Clearly, however, within the Union Scotland continues to become more and more crucial to the survival, not just of ‘the Union’ but England itself. Oil has propped up Westminster for decades. The very stuff that was running out in 2014! Now the super highway will be built to keep the lights on in England. Diminished? Clearly not. What would they do without us? Little wonder that the English Government in Westminster is not demanding independence for England. How diminished would that country be without Scotland.? The myth of our demise is grossly exaggerated by folk like yourself. Fortunately over 50% of the population in Scotland are aware of that and the demographic trend suggests that in the future an even higher proportion of the population will become enlightened regarding our potential to flourish with independence. Let’s hope so before our water is the next casualty.

  3. briannugent9a3659c357 Avatar
    briannugent9a3659c357

    Holyrood is not great, how good is Westminster?

    Gers is a political mirage. Whisky, oil, most of UK fishing, most of UK green energy, most of UK fresh water, I could go on but the point is that Scotland can more than survive economically, it is the UK that has economic issues, and dare not let us depart our ‘voluntary union’ that we can not get out of electorally or legally, voluntary?

    In my personal experience, what I am struck by is how, over the 10 years, many No voters I know, are moving to neutral, and some on to being Yes in this debate.

    How to get to independence?

    Personally, I would not want to be in EU, what is the point of becoming independent, and then giving that independence away to the EU? EU has many issues, not least the EU telling countries what to do, countries in the EU are not sovereign, there is a clue in the name of the EU – European Union.

  4. Good article except for one thing. WM doesn’t borrow anything. Whatever money it needs it creates. WM doesn’t pay any interest on this so why should Scotland.

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