Growth Commission
The SNP must rethink its economic model for an independent Scotland
Author / Creator: Laurie Macfarlane
Media type: Assessment report
Date published:
A critique of the Growth Commission's report. "Far from being an asset to the independence cause, the Growth Commission is its biggest liability. It’s time, as we say, ‘tae think again’."
The SNP must rethink its economic model for an independent Scotland
Author / Creator: Laurie Macfarlane
Media type: Assessment report
Date published:
Scotland can become a successful independent nation. But that plan needs to come from the 2020s. And it needs to come from a broad cross section of civil society, not just business groups. Far from being an asset to the independence cause, the Growth Commission is its biggest liability. It’s time, as we say, ‘tae think again’.
Common Weal Inverness and InverYes – Consideration of the Sustainable Growth Commission Report
Author / Creator: Common Weal
Media type: consultation response
Date published:
The Sustainable Growth Commission appears to be too heavily tied to a free market (neo-liberal) approach to economics.
A Silver Chain – A Critique of the Sustainable Growth Commission’s Monetary Policy Recommendations
Author / Creator: Craig Dalzell
Media type: Review
Date published: June 2018
In May 2018 the Sustainable Growth Commission made its final report, presented as a series of recommendations on the economic, fiscal and monetary case for Scottish independence. This document does not cover the full gamut of policies which would be directly affected by independence nor does it cover the full range of institution building required by a nascent independent state. The report discusses the creation of a “Central Bank”, but creation of other institutions such as energy regulators, customs and borders agencies and foreign and diplomatic services lay outwith its remit.
Scotland’s Fiscal Future
Author / Creator: Craig Dalzell
Media type: Policy Paper
Date published:
The quest for GDP and GDP Growth is not sustainable in a finite world. Metrics such as environmental impact, inequality and wellbeing are far more important and only by elevating them above the quest for “growth at all costs” can a truly fair and sustainable Scotland be created.