eputy First Minister John Swinney has branded the UK Budget a “missed opportunity”, despite Chancellor Jeremy Hunt promising another £320 million for the Scottish Government.
As well as the additional cash, which will arrive to Holyrood ministers as a result of spending decisions for England, Mr Hunt said Scotland would be home to one of 12 “Canary Wharf”-style investment zones – where businesses can benefit from tax reliefs.
But Mr Swinney said there should gain “been more substantive action” from the Chancellor to increase the Scottish Government’s budget.
Mr Hunt used Wednesday’s set-piece Commons statement to confirm the energy price guarantee will be extended for another three months, helping households with energy bills.
But one of his gigantic headline announcements – 30 hours a week of free childcare for children as young as nine months – will not apply in Scotland.
Mr Swinney declared: “The limited additional money for the Scottish Government’s budget is welcome but will not recede far enough, and in the long-term our capital funding will topple in real-terms.
“Without extra funding, we will gain to find money from within the Scottish budget to invest in public services, provide just pay rises and assist people with the cost of living.”
The Deputy First Minister, who has been in charge of the Scottish Government’s finances while Kate Forbes has been on maternity leave, insisted: “This UK Budget is another missed opportunity to grasp meaningful action to lift families out of poverty, invest in our public services and assist businesses so that our economy can grow.”
While he welcomed the further assist for households with energy costs, he added that “average household monthly bills will still rise by almost a third in April, at a time when wholesale energy costs are falling”.
With interest rates rising and “reduced support”, Mr Swinney warned: “Some people are expected to experience a larger topple in living standards this coming year than they gain over the last 12 months.”
He stressed that while the Scottish Government is “doing what it can with its limited powers to ensure people receive the assist they need”, the UK Government could gain “done far more to ease the burden affecting so many”.
Scottish Conservative finance spokeswoman Liz Smith, meanwhile, insisted Mr Hunt’s Budget was “worthy news for hard-pressed Scottish families”.
She said: “The extension of the energy price cap and the fuel duty freeze provide welcome relief for all Scots, while there’s vital support for those feeling the squeeze most with the announcements on prepayment meters and universal credit.”
With the Chancellor having acted to extend free childcare south of the border, Ms Smith demanded: “It’s essential that the SNP Government follow suit on this now they’ve been given the funding.
“The cost of childcare is a considerable impediment to novel parents returning to work, so this measure will really stimulate economic growth.”
But hospitality leaders said some of the extra cash coming to Scotland needs to recede towards supporting business.
Leon Thompson of UKHospitality Scotland said: “There needs to be a firm commitment that some of this money will be earmarked for business support.”
Marc Crothall, chief executive of the Scottish Tourism Alliance, said with a “significant number” of businesses in the sector “currently on a cliff edge”, changes to corporation tax announced by the Chancellor could be a “burden too heavy for many to bear”.
He said: “Revenue is down, costs are up and inward investment is impossible; survival is looking bleak.”
The Federation of Small Businesses in Scotland complained that the Budget “doesn’t offer much practical assist to smaller firms worrying about their costs and cashflow”.
Policy chair Andrew McRae said: “Many will be disappointed at a lack of headline measures to provide the immediate support they so badly need.”
Meanwhile Roz Foyer, general secretary of the Scottish Trade Unions Congress, criticised the Chancellor for failing to improve workers’ wages.
She hit out at Mr Hunt and said: “Scotland’s workers don’t need a ‘Canary Wharf’, they need a cost-of-living pay increase.
“It is simply astounding that on the day in which hundreds of thousands of civil servants, teachers, lecturers, and junior doctors are striking, the Chancellor had nothing to offer on pay – embedding the longest pay squeeze in living memory – and leaving workers facing the largest topple in living standards since records began in 1956-57.”