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Alf Baird's avatar

Interesting analysis Callum. Of course, nothing is possible until after independence/ decolonization - political, economic and cultural.

My comparision of Scottish GDP-per-capita with our near neighbour states, most with less resources than us, suggests the UK Union 'colonial corset' is costing Scots at least £150 billion per annum:

https://yoursforscotlandcom.wordpress.com/2024/03/19/the-real-economic-price-of-the-uk-union-for-scots/

On the matter of competitiveness and (lack of) economic growth, the possibility of very low energy costs in Scotland as opposed to the highest in Europe should be a key factor, as well as the ability to invoice for our stolen energy production:

https://yoursforscotlandcom.wordpress.com/2024/04/18/the-realities-of-an-energy-rich-scotland-plundered-under-colonial-rule/

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Niall Huggan's avatar

You’re banging the wrong drum. There can be no black hole in a fiat currency issuing state like the UK. National debt is not a problem per se. Remember that the UK created the NHS from scratch whilst its public finances were still reeling from WW2, AND we were still on the gold standard. There £ is no longer tied to the gold standard, so there is more freedom to spend within the limits of the UK’s resources. Might be good to research the work of Stephanie Kelton, Scotonomics, and how MMT describes public finances and fiscal policy for more information on this subject.

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