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PFI DECISIONS CAUSED PUBLIC FINNCES TO BE SQUEEZED ‘TIL THE PIPS SQUEAK …

By Bill Heaney

Where does all the money go? Why are the finances of West Dunbartonshire Council and local government in general in such a parlous state?

Marie McNair (Clydebank and Milngavie) (SNP), a former Wert Dunbartonshire councillor, gave her colleagues at Holyrood and insight into why Scotland’s councils are drifting towards bec oming a modern day version of the Weimark Republic (see above).
Why are we all being screwed until the pips squeak to pay for public services?
Why might we all be facing a ten per cent increase in our council tax when the Council budget meeting in the Dumbarton Burgh Hall meets on March?

The former Labour Party member, whose brother, Cllr Andy White, was once a notorious leader of the Labour administration, dropped into a lengthy debate about the negative impacts that the PPP and PFI burden has inflicted on the public sector.

SNP’s Marie McNair MSP and Labour Finance spokesperson Michael Marra.

She said: “It is yet another real example of Labour’s desire to replicate Tory party policy, and the debate serves as a stark reminder of why the Labour Party cannot be trusted to manage Scotland’s finances.

“PFI and PPP contracts have left a harmful and lasting legacy in Scotland. They were first introduced under the Tory Westminster Government in 1990 and fully embraced by successive Labour Governments in Westminster and Holyrood.

“However, although they were posed as effective solutions, they have instead burdened Scotland’s public services and taxpayers with unsustainable financial sums for decades.

“According to Professor Ciaran Connolly,  ‘they produced projects with assets worth approximately £60 billion, which are costing the taxpayer £170 billion—that’s a gap of £110 billion between what the assets are worth and what the taxpayer is paying for them’.”

She added: “Costs end up getting passed on to the taxpayer, which, as Professor Connolly has said, can constrain “what authorities such as the NHS can spend on essential services, forcing them to reduce budgets accordingly. It has also created pressure to reduce project costs, leading to poorer infrastructure.”

Ms McNair added: “That impacts on local council budgets, too. In my constituency, 37.9 per cent of council tax in East Dunbartonshire and 41.2 per cent of council tax in West Dunbartonshire goes on PPP payments.

“Labour’s financial mismanagement has had severe consequences, and its wasteful PFI deals have foisted a £30 billion repayments bill on Scottish taxpayers, forcing us all to pay many times more than the original cost of the projects.

“The funds that are used to pay for those agreements would have been much better spent on our public services to support education or tackle child poverty.

Instead, it was left to the SNP to fix Labour’s mess. Under the SNP Scottish Government, we moved away from that model to a model under which, importantly, surpluses do not go into the pockets of big investors, as Labour allowed. One perfect example is hospital car parking charges, which are a terrible legacy of PFI; the Scottish Government scrapped the charges that were in place as a result of Labour PFI deals.

Scotland continues to pay extortionate amounts for Labour’s incompetence. The 2023 figures show that the amount still owed under PPP for hospitals and schools is £15.4 billion, which is not even half of Labour’s eye-watering total PPP bill.

The contracts are not just an enormously expensive way to borrow—they are often inflexible. A 2019 report by the JPI Media investigations team found that schools, hospitals and police forces have been locked “in the iron grip of contractors”,  and are paying extortionate extra charges.

Examples in that report included a school being charged £25,000 for three parasols and a hospital trust paying £5,500 for a new sink. The contracts are extremely profitable for the private sector, but not for the taxpayer.

Nearly 18 years after Labour was kicked out of office in Scotland, we are still paying a heavy price for the disastrous PPP contracts.

The Scottish taxpayers have had to shell out enormous sums of money above the actual cost of projects, while PPP contractors hoard huge profits.

It is clear that PPP contracts have been disastrous for Scotland’s public finances, so it is welcome that the Scottish Government recognises those options for what they are—extremely poor value for money and certainly not in the best interests of the Scottish people.

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The hyperinflation crisis, 1923

The Weimar government’s main crisis occurred in 1923 after the Germans missed a reparations payment late in 1922. This set off a chain of events that included occupation, hyperinflation and rebellions.

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Labour’s Michel Marra replied: “it is essential that we learn the lessons that members are already setting out about the value in those contracts over time. It is particularly important to set out the context around historical examples and why some of those decisions were taken. However, there is no doubt that those contracts still place a heavy burden on council tax payers in parts of Scotland, even as many constituents continue to use the facilities that are in place.

“The UK Chancellor of the Exchequer has unequivocally confirmed that there will be no return to PFI during her tenure. I have seen the reports that are referenced in the motion, but the chancellor has been quite clear about that.

“The Treasury is dealing with a time of constrained public finances, for different reasons than those that pertained at the time of the advent of the UK Labour Government in 1997. We have to make sure that we can get public finance off the ground in order to get key projects working and get the economy growing. Again, that is an agenda that many people would agree with.

“It is right, however, that we draw a distinction between the original early PFI arrangements from a generation ago and the subsequent arrangements between public and private sectors to bring capital investment to the table.

“The non-profit-distributing model is a variation on that core principle, and it has to be said that the SNP Government’s involvement in those public-private arrangements dwarfs that of the previous Scottish Executive on the basis of longevity alone.”

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