Absolutely; we are a united kingdom. For instance, Lincolnshire gets more money in its educational grant because of the sparsity factor. All these things can be worked out in a constructive manner between the United Kingdom Government and the Scottish Government so that there is a fair support mechanism based on need and that takes account of issues such as declining oil revenues, the sparsity factor that I mentioned, declining heavy industries, or an ageing population. The grant should be determined by these matters, not by some ageing formula based on what the United Kingdom spends.
Scotland Bill
Proceeding contribution from
Edward Leigh
(Conservative)
in the House of Commons on Monday, 15 June 2015.
It occurred during Debate on bills
and
Committee of the Whole House (HC) on Scotland Bill.
About this proceeding contribution
Reference
597 c32 Session
2015-16Chamber / Committee
House of Commons chamberSubjects
Librarians' tools
Timestamp
2015-06-16 13:45:39 +0100
URI
http://hansard.intranet.data.parliament.uk/Commons/2015-06-15/15061516000263
In Indexing
http://indexing.parliament.uk/Content/Edit/1?uri=http://hansard.intranet.data.parliament.uk/Commons/2015-06-15/15061516000263
In Solr
https://search.parliament.uk/claw/solr/?id=http://hansard.intranet.data.parliament.uk/Commons/2015-06-15/15061516000263