Scotland’s sense of injustice blights its future

John describes the eonomic agenda for Scotland following the SNP’s latest victory, in the light of the continuing legacy of an apocryphal account of Scottish history.

Last week, Britain’s Labour party suffered its most crushing by-election defeat yet by losing Glasgow East to the Scottish National party. The result owes more to the UK government’s unpopularity than to a desire for independence. Polls show that a referendum in Scotland would produce a substantial majority against.

But the measures that established a devolved assembly in 1999 have changed Scotland’s economic agenda in ways that are only beginning to emerge. The powers of the Scottish government are limited, but its freedom of action is constrained more by habit than by legal restriction. Both the Scottish executive and the UK Treasury continue to behave as though Scotland were still another English government department.

To gain freedom of action is almost as difficult as to give up power. A Scottish childhood is an education in the ready acquisition and dogged pursuit of grievance – a trait that has proved so damaging to Gordon Brown, the prime minister. Impotent resentment has for long been the dominant theme of Scottish politics. For Labour, Scotland’s economic and social problems have been the fault of international capitalism. For Scottish nationalists the blame lies squarely with the English. Both claims are absurd.

The culture of victimhood has not served black Americans, or the Irish, or the Indians, well: better for black people to run for president, for the Irish to embrace the structure of a modern European state and for India to release entrepreneurial energy than to brood on the past. But at least black Americans, the Irish and the Indians can claim to have once been victims. The Scots cannot. In the southern US, Ulster and India, people of Scottish origin were the oppressors, not the oppressed. Few countries benefited as much as Scotland from globalisation and imperialism.

The tragedy of deprived Glasgow East is that its condition is the result of measures that appeared for a time to represent the triumph of municipal socialism. But the decanting of poorly housed inner city residents to planned modern estates proved to be a disaster in Scotland as it did almost everywhere else.

The resulting decay is not easily arrested. The British government has funded urban regeneration programmes and schemes to attract industry to west central Scotland. In the end, there is not much to show for its expenditure although public spending in Scotland remains well above the UK norm. Overall income per head today is broadly in line with the UK average, thanks to two booming cities in Edinburgh and Aberdeen and the partial revival of the Scottish highlands.

The surge in the fortunes of the SNP, based on recognition of these economic realities, is associated with a shift from a culture of complaint to a more constructive agenda. The once barely concealed Anglophobia has been suppressed. The demand for unjust enrichment in the slogan “it’s our oil” has at least partly given way to analysis of a more substantive economic question. Why has Scotland’s growth rate not matched that of other small European states in the “arc of prosperity” that stretches from Ireland to Finland?

But Margaret Curran, Labour’s candidate in Glasgow East, offered no sense of this change in mood when she pledged to continue the fight against injustice despite defeat. Outcomes in Glasgow East are indeed unjust, but that injustice is not the fault of multinational companies, the World Trade Organisation, the UK government or other agencies outside Scotland. Scotland’s economic problems, like its opportunities, are of its own making.

A Scottish government cannot protect the country from the vagaries of the global economy and should not try. The need is to develop and exploit the competitive advantages of Scottish businesses on an international scale. If Scotland seems to be drifting towards independence, it is not because of the economic logic of that outcome but because, like Ms Curran, opponents cling to a tradition of Red Clydeside that values heroic failure above pragmatic success.

The writer is a member of the Scottish government’s Council of Economic Advisers

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