• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • Articles
  • Blog
  • About
  • Contribute
  • Contact

Sceptical Scot

Asking Questions. Seeking Answers.

What does the Autumn Statement mean for Scotland?

November 23, 2023 by Fraser of Allander Institute Leave a Comment

The two main tax measures – lower NICs and making full expensing permanent – are UK-wide, and apply automatically in Scotland.

Some other measures announced are England-only, and therefore bring with them additional funding for the Scottish Government through the Barnett formula, totalling £233m in this financial year and £281m in the next. The main measures generating consequentials are:

  • The funding of the pay award for the NHS in England in 2023-24, which generates £235m;
  • The 75% relief on business rates in England for the retail, hospitality and leisure sectors in 2024-25, up to a £110,000 cash cap, which generates £232m;
  • Freezing the small business multiplier in England in 2024-25, which generates £32m.

As these are devolved matters, the Scottish Government receives this funding but is under no obligation to match the policies announced by Westminster. For example, the retail, hospitality and leisure relief is a repeat of the measure for 2023-24, which the Scottish Government decided not to pass on and spent elsewhere. So this is one to watch out for at next month’s Scottish Budget.

Settlements with the Treasury are only fully determined until 2024-25, when the current spending review period finishes. Nevertheless, the UK Government budgets on a 5-year basis, and has to give the OBR an indicative assumption for departmental and devolved spending. This is a technical detail, and is only indicative at this time, but the OBR’s forecast incorporates a slightly higher spending assumption than it did in March, whose consequences are buried deep in our favourite supplementary table 3.11. If this did come to pass, it would mean Scottish Government spending power being higher in each year by between £1.1bn and £1.4bn from 2025-26 onwards.

We have also summarised which measures apply directly to Scotland or are devolved in the table below.

Table 7: Summary of whether measures are reserved or devolved

AnnouncementReservedDevolved
National Insurance contributions (NICs): 2p cut to the main rate of Class 1 employee NICs from January 2024Applies in Scotland 
 National Insurance contributions (NICs): 1p cut to the main rate of Class 4 self-employed NICs from April 2024Applies in Scotland 
 National Insurance contributions (NICs): abolish Class 2 selfemployed NICs liability from April 2024Applies in Scotland 
Business Rates: 75% relief for Retail, Hospitality and Leisure sectors in 2024-25, up to £110,000 cash cap Consequentials 2024/25: £232m
Business Rates: freeze the small business multiplier in 2024-25 Consequentials 2024/25: £32m
 Local Housing Allowance (LHA): set to the 30th percentile from April 2024Applies in Scotland 
 Universal Credit: extend the £2,500 surplus earnings threshold for one year from April 2024Applies in Scotland 
 Universal Credit: increase the Minimum Income Floor by up to a max. of £1,250 a month for lead carers from April 2024Applies in Scotland 
 Alcohol duty: freeze rates until 1 August 2024Applies in Scotland 
 Tobacco duty: increase duty on Hand Rolling Tobacco by RPI+12% from 6pm on 22 November 2023Applies in Scotland 
 Individual Savings Accounts: maintain subscription limits at current levels for 2024-25 for Adult, Junior, Lifetime ISAs and Child Trust FundApplies in Scotland 
 VAT: extend the zero rate on Women’s Sanitary Products to include period underwear from January 2024Applies in Scotland 
 Universal Credit: Severe Disability Premium transitional protectionApplies in Scotland 
 Restart: expand eligibility and extend the scheme for two years Consequentials:
2024/25: £27m
 Mandatory Work Placements: phased rollout Consequentials:
2024/25: £3m
 Talking Therapies: expand access and increase provision Consequentials:
2024/25: £2m
 Individual Placement and Support (IPS): expand access Consequentials:
2024/25: £1m
Fit Note Reform trial Consequentials:
2024/25: £1m
 NHS: funding for Agenda for Change pay awards (consolidated and non-consolidated) and winter planning Consequentials:
2023/24: £235m
Apprenticeship Growth Sector Pilot Consequentials:
2024/25: £2m
Local Authority Housing Fund, housing supply and planning Consequentials:
2024/25: £10m

Source: OBR, FAI calculations

Extract from the full FAI analysis of the Autumn Statement

Filed Under: Articles, Economics, Economy, Policy, Politics, UK Tagged With: Scotland, Scottish Budget, scottish economy, Scottish Government

About Fraser of Allander Institute

Scotland’s leading economic research institute with over 40 years of experience in finding practical solutions to real-world economic problems.

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

About Sceptical Scot

Welcome to Sceptical Scot, Scotland’s premier non-tribal forum for passionate, informed debate. Sceptical Scot is for all who care about Scotland’s future, regardless of how they vote: for party, independence or union, EU or Brexit. We aim to provide an arena that is both broader and deeper than current online/print offers with a rich diet of well-researched, polemical, thought-provoking writing. Read more » about About Sceptical Scot

What’s new on Sceptical Scot

  • And the winner is…The Absent Voters Party April 18, 2026
  • What’s ‘good for Scotland’ in 2026 election? April 10, 2026
  • Four poems in defiance of an uneasy spring April 5, 2026
  • Mind the (implementation) gap: Neurodivergence in Scotland April 3, 2026
  • Inside the Wall of Death, a wealth of human kindness March 29, 2026
  • Certain uncertainties of Iran War, inflation and public finances March 25, 2026
  • When a night club demolition becomes a radical right dog-whistle March 15, 2026
  • ‘Epic Fury’ suffering continues even if Trump invents an end to his illegal war March 8, 2026
  • Global food insecurity: another dividend from Trump’s war of choice March 6, 2026
  • Public pay settlements: a crisis waiting for the next Scottish government March 1, 2026

The Sceptical Newsletter

Categories

  • anti-fascism (12)
  • Articles (736)
  • Blog (682)
  • Books & Poetry (27)
  • Brexit (231)
  • climate crisis (55)
  • climate crisis (9)
  • Covid19 (67)
  • Criminal justice (19)
  • Culture (349)
  • Devo20 (1)
  • Economics (202)
  • Economy (186)
  • Education (84)
  • Elections (242)
  • Energy (13)
  • Environment (105)
  • European Union (294)
  • Featured (44)
  • Federalism (23)
  • federalism (15)
  • Health (71)
  • History (97)
  • Housing (29)
  • Humour (11)
  • identity (32)
  • Independence (322)
  • Inequality (88)
  • International (81)
  • Ireland (15)
  • Ireland (8)
  • Local government (97)
  • Longer reads (82)
  • Media (19)
  • Podcast (4)
  • Poetry (74)
  • Policy (310)
  • Politics (479)
  • Polls and quizzes (2)
  • protest song (1)
  • Reviews (26)
  • Social democracy (93)
  • Tributes to David Gow (2)
  • Trump (27)
  • UK (423)
  • Uncategorized (16)

Sceptical Scot elsewhere

Facebook
Twitter

About Sceptical Scot

Since 2014 Sceptical Scot has offered a non-tribal forum for passionate, informed debate for all who care about Scotland’s future

Copyright © 2026 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in