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Groundhog day may
well have been a couple of weeks ago, but every day in the run up to the
Independence referendum resembles the day before… or maybe last Tuesday.
The last couple
of days has resembled the days after Mark Carney’s speech, when both sides went
through their arguments about I-Scotland adopting the English Pound. Since Gideon Osborne’s speech, ruling out
r-UK from setting up a “Sterling zone” with an Independent Scotland though, leaked
out via Nick Watt in the Guardian there is fresh ferocity.
Pro union
supporters have been trumping Osborne’s intervention, alongside pledges from Ed
Balls and Danny Alexander as torpedoing the Salmond plan for an Independent
Scotland. Pro Independence supporters
have been bitterly complaining about the bully boy tactics of Westminster in
refusing to let an Independent Scotland (which we have a share in) use
Sterling. Sturgeon’s appearance on BBC
Scotland’s GMS was akin to a spoiled brat whinging about the big boy that took
his ball away.
There is two
points to be made about this intervention though. Firstly, we will find out if the SNP truly
put some thought behind the plan of adopting the English Pound. Now that there is little (if any) likelihood
of I-Scotland using the English Pound as part of a Sterling zone, I wonder if
the SNP have looked at all of the available options. Judging by Sturgeon’s reaction on GMS
yesterday morning, probably not.
As I’ve pointed
out, I’m not particularly sold on adopting the English Pound. Entering into a currency union would entail
giving up sovereignty and also some of those economic leavers that Swinney and
the other members of the Scottish government talk about. It’s pretty similar to the arguments against
the UK entering the Euro, so it is quite strange to see members of “Scottish”
Labour who presumably (because we have never heard a peep of dissent from the
official line) were pro UK entry to the Euro but are now against the creation
of a Sterling zone.
The second point
is that pro-Independence supporters should now disabuse themselves of any
notion that in the event of a yes vote, the separation negotiations will be all
tea and cakes. To paraphrase my local
MP, Divorce will be an expensive business & that Westminster will do
everything in their power to hinder an Independent Scotland. This probably means that Salmond’s stated
Independence Day of 24 March 2016 may be put back if everything is to be done
and dusted by that point.
We can expect
r-UK to try and put the spanner into Scotland’s attempts to join the EU, we can
expect painful negotiations about the division of the national debt and also
the division of assets. This of course is something that I did bring up in March 2012.
A lot of the
coverage has said this is a turning point.
In reality, it will be nothing of the sort. Westminster will assert that they will not
take part in a currency union, while the Yes campaigners will continue to say
that we can and will, without really understanding that this option is not the
best option or will fly anyway. At this
rate, it’ll be another couple of weeks until Sterling zone comes up again.
1 comment:
It's not the "English" pound they'll be "adopting".
It's the pound sterling and it belongs to both nations. So really it's a case of status quo there until such times as the people of Scotland vote otherwise.
The pound sterling is not the exclusive property of England. The bank of England is also an English bank in name only, it is also part owned by Scotland, Wales, and N.Ireland.
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