Another viewIf Scotland becomes an independent country, its territorial waters will
include the North Sea oil and gas installations and so any tax revenue
arising will accrue to the new Scots Treasury under international law. How
much revenue and how long it will last can only be speculated on.
The Barnett formula for fiscal transfers from the current UK Treasury to
Scotland will cease to apply after independence in March 2016. The SNP has
decided to link its acceptance of 8% (per capita) of UK National Debt to
the use of sterling as its currency. It will also expect to receive 8% of
the UK Gilts held by the Bank of England acquired through "Quantitative
Easing". Salmond will claim all this as a democratic mandate if he wins.
A Yes vote in September will likely cause immediate turmoil in the bond
markets. The UK Treasury has already had to agree to honour any UK debt
issued up to March 2016 to re-assure the markets. But this may not work as
intended.
If the currency question is not settled promptly, there will be a real
fiscal crisis. The UK's previously untarnished reputation for debt
repayment will be in jeopardy. Gilt yields and interest rates may rise
rapidly. Massive cuts across all government expenditure may have to be
implemented instantly. The deficit is still running at around £120billion
pa. The economy would tank.
On top of that 300+ years of political union will have to be un-stitched
and a whole raft of international treaties re-negotiated by both
subsequent entities. There cannot be a United Kingdom with only one
kingdom. This includes our membership of the UN, NATO, the EU etc etc but
unfortunately not FIFA.
If I were Scots I'd vote for independence, if only to be rid of the
Southern English. The Scots haven't forgotten the early imposition of the
Poll Tax by Thatcher. But goodness, if they do vote Yes - can anyone have
confidence in Salmond's and Cameron's capacities to sort things out?