Good morning and welcome to  the third meeting in 2024 of   the Finance and Public Administration Committee. We have one item on today’s agenda, which  is to take evidence on the replacement of   European Union structural funds in Scotland  from the Rt Hon. Michael Gove MP, Secretary  

Of State for Levelling Up, Housing  and Communities, and Minister for   Intergovernmental Relations, in the United  Kingdom Government. Mr Gove joins us online.   A very good morning to you and welcome to the  Finance and Public Administration Committee. We have almost 90 minutes for the evidence  session. Before I open up the discussion to  

Members, I understand that Mr Gove would  like to make a short opening statement. First, it is a pleasure to appear before the  committee again. On the previous occasion on which   I did so, I was able to join you in person, so  I apologise for joining you virtually today.

I appreciate the critically important work that  the committee is doing to scrutinise the Scottish   Government’s budget and the relationship between  the UK and Scottish Government. I welcome the   accountability and the chance to answer the  committee’s questions and provide you, and  

Scottish voters, with more information about the  UK Government’s role in promoting levelling up. As the committee knows, the UK Government  has a commitment to investing alongside   and with devolved Administrations to improve  productivity and access to services, to ensure   that every part of the United Kingdom enjoys  the same opportunities to grow and flourish.

We have put in place a variety of different funds  that operate across the UK. Perhaps most prominent   is the levelling up fund, but there is also  the UK shared prosperity fund, the community   renewal fund, the community ownership fund and  others. We have also established levelling up  

Partnerships with individual parts of  the UK, including four in Scotland. On top of that, we have invested in two  investment zones and two green freeports.   Those investments were made in partnership with  and co-designed by the Scottish Government. The   geographical spread and the enthusiasm  shown by local government and business  

In Scotland are testament to the power  of the two Governments working together. Although the UK Government and the Scottish  Government have disagreements on issues—most   prominently, the constitutional future  of Scotland within the United Kingdom—I   am pleased to say that there is pragmatic  day-to-day working at every level among  

Ministers and officials who remain committed to  doing the very best for the people of Scotland. Thank you for that opening statement.  I will kick off with a few questions,   and then I will let colleagues  in from around the table.

One of the key issues with the whole levelling  up agenda is the actual volume of cash that has   been allocated. When I refer to that agenda,  I am also talking about the other funding   streams that you mentioned. Colleagues will  go into some of those in a bit more depth,  

But how does the money that has been not only  allocated to, but actually spent in, Scotland in   the past three years compare to what it would have  been had Scotland remained in the European Union? The amount that we have allocated has  been allocated more responsively than  

The way in which EU funds were allocated. Overall, we are committed to ensuring that  the funding that we allocate through the UK   shared prosperity fund matches the funding  that the EU would have given. A number of EU   projects that are in their outworkings are still  providing funding. However, overall, our manifesto  

Commitment—which we have kept—is for funding from  the UK shared prosperity fund and other funds to   match the amount that the EU spent. I would argue that things such as green freeports   and investment zones show a greater  degree of overall investment from the  

UK Government than would have been the  case if it was left simply to the EU. You talked about an increase in investment,   but I did not hear any actual figures for  what has been spent in the past three years. The Institute for Fiscal Studies says that UK  departmental budgets in the forthcoming financial  

Year will be less than they were in 2010. That  surely does not help that levelling up agenda. The convener is right that our spending  pattern across the whole of the United   Kingdom has had to take account of some  of the significant inflationary pressures  

That have come about as a result of  global economic factors. However,   there is a real-terms spending increase in public  spending in our plans across the United Kingdom. To give specifics, we are spending £52  million on green freeports and £160 million  

On investment zones. The 24 levelling up fund  projects that we have so far are worth £485   million. The amount of UK shared prosperity  fund already committed is £212 million,   and that will increase in the years to come.  The levelling up partnerships that we have are  

Another £80 million, in addition to £140 million  for the long-term plan for towns. That is on top   of the money that has been committed in  the past through city and growth deals,   which amounts to about £1.5 billion. There are  also some other smaller funds alongside that.

It has to be said that there seems to be quite a   plethora of funds. It is about trying  to get a grip on where they all are and   how much is actually being spent on the  ground, as opposed to being allocated.

One area in which there is no dispute is  the significant reduction in the amount of   capital that will be available to the Scottish  Government for the next five years. According   to the Scottish Fiscal Commission, it will  reduce by up to 20 per cent. The Deputy  

First Minister has said that, in real terms,  it is more likely to reduce by 11 per cent.   Whichever of those figures you accept,  capital budgets declining surely works   against what you are trying to do with levelling  up. In Scotland, we are talking about much more  

Of a reduction in capital than money  that is being spent on levelling up. I will make two points. First, the overall amount that is given to the  Scottish Government for it to spend through the   block grant is at its highest level ever, at  £41 billion. It is for the Scottish Government  

To decide—quite rightly—how it allocates  that money among its various priorities. In relation to capital spending, I note that the  whole of the UK benefits from the full expensing   that was brought in at the budget, which allows  capital investment in the private sector in the  

Productive economy to be set against tax. That  is a big boost for industry, jobs and investment. I should also say that some of the capital  investment that we have been looking at UK-wide   is also contributing to economic growth. Only  today, Sumitomo renewed capital investment in the  

Green freeport at Cromarty. That is an example of  the Scottish Government and UK Government working   together to unlock capital investment from the  private sector that creates new green jobs. You are right that the resource budget has  gone up by above inflation, if we accept  

The gross domestic product deflator at  1.7 per cent. However, even with that,   capital allocation from the UK Government is  declining significantly. That is beyond dispute. You talked initially about inflationary  pressures, which is an important issue.   As you know, in October 2021, in my  area, we were delighted to be awarded  

£23.7 million for the upgrade of the B714 in  North Ayrshire. That will make a significant   difference to the North Ayrshire economy  and it was welcomed across the board. I   and the local MP both supported it, as  did all parties in the local authority.

Since then, inflationary pressures have hit that  project hard, and the cost has now increased   by more than £5 million. When you came to the  committee two years ago and I raised the issue   of inflation, you said that the matter would  be considered in relation to those projects.

My understanding is that the local authority has  been advised that it will not get an increase in   funding. Only about 10 per cent has been spent so  far, because of all the work that has to be done   before such projects are started. In effect,  the project has seen a £5 million shortfall.  

If the UK Government wants—as I am sure that it  does—such projects to succeed in cases in which   the recipients of levelling up funding have no  control over costings because of the construction   inflation that we are all well aware of, it  should surely step up to the plate and provide  

The additional funding to ensure that those  projects are delivered as originally intended. That is a very fair point.  I will make a few points. First, local partners are responsible for  ensuring that they apply appropriate discipline   to any project. There was always a little bit  of wiggle room when funding was allocated in  

The first place, but I take the convener’s  point that inflation has been high. It helps   that it has now come down from 11.1 per cent to  4 per cent, but it is still a significant factor. The second point is that local authorities  can submit a project adjustment request  

If they believe that the scope of the  project needs to be reduced or altered,   that the timescale over which it is delivered  needs to be extended, or that they need critical   additional funding to deliver it. All those issues  would be considered on a case-by-case basis.

Has that happened? Do you have any examples  of where that has happened in Scotland? I know that a number of project adjustment  requests have been made by local authorities   in England. I do not have a record of any  project adjustment requests in Scotland.

It would be helpful to know that,  because there are real concerns   that local authorities would then have to  allocate money from other capital funds,   which are already under pressure, to ensure  that those levelling up projects are completed. I will move on. The Scottish Local Authorities  Economic Development Group—SLAED, which is not  

To be confused with the 1970s pop group—has  submitted information to us and raised a number   of issues. For example, with regard to how funding  was allocated, SLAED was concerned that no local   authority that had been successful in round  1 was successful in round 2 and that that was

“a consequence of a UK Government decision, taken  at a late stage in the process, not to approve any   bids submitted by a local authority that had been  successful in round 1. This gives rise to doubts   that the bids selected were not necessarily  the best submitted in terms of quality.”

Why did the Government decide to do  that? Some authorities are a lot bigger   than others, and Glasgow is an obvious  example. Glasgow had a number of projects   that it wanted to submit because it has a  disproportionate number of deprived areas. Yes; I appreciate that. The whole  process of allocating funds has  

Evolved and changed over time. We have  taken on board the concerns that local   authorities have expressed, as well  as the welcome experiences that local   authorities have shared with us about  the effective working of the process. We have a formula that seeks to allocate the  funds on an objective basis. I think that we  

Have shared some of the details with the  committee and I can share more today. The   important thing is that, if we look at spending  across all three rounds of the levelling up fund,   and we also look at the spending that has  been allocated through green freeports,   investment zones, levelling  up partnerships and elsewhere,  

We have a very good geographical spread across  Scotland and a particular concentration on areas   of greater deprivation. We assess not just  the quality and deliverability of the bid   but the metrics, which lead us to decide  whether a particular area is important.

Good bids have been funded, including a number of  bids in Glasgow and the greater Glasgow economic   area. Our plan for towns involves long-term  funding for Clydebank, Coatbridge and Greenock,   because we recognise that those communities  have all suffered as a result of economic  

And industrial decline in the past. They are  being supported, as well as specific projects   in Glasgow. Of course, Glasgow is an investment  zone and, as a result, is receiving £80 million to   support the work that is being done there. There  are also smaller projects going on in Glasgow,  

Including work to revive Drumchapel town centre,   that are evidence of our commitment  to that broad geographical spread. Yes; something like 21 of 32  Scottish local authorities   have received awards through the three rounds. Yes. However, Clackmannanshire, which is one  of the smallest local authorities—and the  

Smallest mainland local authority, with about  50,000 people—had real difficulties with the   timescales for submitting allocations, so it  was unable to bid. Clackmannanshire Council   said that it is disadvantaged because of its  size and the lack of staffing capacity within   the local authority. Those kinds  of projects do not come up all the  

Time, so the council does not necessarily have  officers sitting there hoping that they will. With regard to other local authorities that have  not received funding, some local authorities   might, on paper, seem prosperous across the board.  East Lothian is an obvious example, because much  

Of East Lothian is very prosperous, but parts  of East Lothian are not prosperous at all and   the area includes some of the most deprived areas  of Scotland. East Lothian Council therefore feels   that the metrics that the UK Government is using  do not take account of some of those issues.

I think that that is a fair point.  As you said, Clackmannanshire is   one of the smallest local authorities in  Scotland, and East Renfrewshire and East   Dunbartonshire are broadly similar in size.  There are challenges there, but other local   authorities, such as Dumfries and Galloway, that  are small in terms of population but not size,  

Have been successful in putting in bids. In  a way, Dumfries and Galloway is analogous   to East Lothian. It is an area that  some people would think is prosperous   but it has significant pockets of deprivation,  and it has navigated the process successfully.

Every local authority in Scotland received  £125,000 in capacity funding to help with bidding.   Irrespective of size, that money was allocated to  everyone from Highland Council to Clackmannanshire   Council. It is legitimate to say that, in the  allocation process, a slightly different weighting  

Might have meant, to some people, a slightly more  effectively targeted allocation of funds, but the   approach that we have taken balances deprivation  overall with a council’s ability to deliver. We also made a specific alteration to the way  in which the levelling up fund is allocated  

To take account of Scotland’s needs. One  thing that is specific to Scotland when it   comes to allocating levelling up funds is dwelling  vacancy rates—in effect, depopulation. As we know,   the population of Scotland, like that of the rest  of the UK, has generally moved with growth from  

West to east in the past few years. That  is why a lot of projects take account of   that depopulation factor and dwelling vacancy  rates was agreed to be the best proxy for it. The Western Isles is one of the most  deprived areas of Scotland and the most  

Rural. It is suffering depopulation and has  not received any funding. That is an issue. I will quote what the National Audit Office says: “The three funds”— the UK prosperity fund, the  levelling up fund and the towns fund— “have overlapping objectives but were  designed and announced at different  

Times, such that local authorities  could not align their plans”. The NAO seems to indicate that UK Government  departments were perhaps not speaking to each   other in the way that they should  have been so that you could get a   more complete and rounded picture and  resources could be allocated much more  

Effectively and efficiently.  Is there some truth in that? No, I do not think so. Different people will  interpret the purpose of the funds in different   ways, but they all serve specific and sometimes  overlapping purposes, which can be a good thing.

I will take for example a city that I know well:  Aberdeen. It was successful in the first round of   levelling up funding. That money—£20 million—is  going to a significant new city-centre project,   which is transforming the old market  area just behind Union Street. That  

Is complementary to the work that is being  done in Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire through   the investment zone funding, which in turn  is complementary to the work that is being   done through the energy transition zone.  They are all examples of working together.

You mentioned the Western Isles. It is true that  the Western Isles was not an early recipient   of levelling up funding. However, Western Isles  Council is now in a levelling up partnership with   the UK Government and the Scottish Government,  which means £20 million going to the council.  

In addition, we have backed a number of specific  projects in the region. Money has gone from the   shared prosperity fund to Macaulay College,  which is a fantastic initiative that helps   young people in the Western Isles. Those are all  examples of our efforts to ensure that the Western  

Isles are prioritised for targeted funding because  of the challenges that you rightly point out. More broadly, Western Isles Council—and,  for that matter, Argyll and Bute Council,   Orkney Islands Council and Shetland Islands  Council—plays a big part in our islands forum,   which is a UK-wide body that the Welsh Government,  Scottish Government, Northern Ireland Executive  

And UK Government have set up to deal with the  specific needs of islands communities. At the   moment, we are working together on a shared task  and finish group to look at not just ferries,   but digital connectivity between the  islands and the mainland of Great Britain.

Thank you very much. I will open  up the questioning to colleagues.   The first to ask questions will be Liz Smith. Good morning, secretary of state. When you  were last at committee, back in February 2022,   Michelle Thomson, Daniel Johnson and I all asked  you about the objective analysis that goes into  

The decision-making process on who gets money  and who does not. On that occasion, you said: “I am absolutely confident that  our assessment is objective.”— You also said that you would come back  to the committee to explain if we had   any concerns about that objectivity and  whether people understood the process by  

Which awards were made. Since that  time, you will be pleased to hear,   we have had some very complimentary comments  about the process—in the past year, 13 local   authorities said that they were very pleased with  it. However, some local authorities have not been  

Successful and they are slightly critical  about the fact that there is not sufficient   transparency about who gets what and who does  not. Can you update us on where we are with that? Yes, of course. Thank you, Liz.

When it comes to the levelling up fund and the  allocation of money, we identify priority areas,   and there are three principal metrics that  we use initially. The first is productivity,   which is gross value added per hour, the  second is the unemployment rate among those  

Over the age of 16, and the third is skills. We  measure the proportion of the 16 to 64-year-old   population without a national vocational  qualification or equivalent qualification.   Obviously, there are different qualifications  in Scotland and England, but we use those as  

The first set of metrics. Then, as I mentioned,  in Scotland in particular, we have the dwelling   vacancy rate—the rural depopulation  measure. Those are the principal metrics. Once we have identified areas, we look at scoring  for skills, pay, productivity and health, then we  

Allocate scores to different areas. For the most  recent levelling up fund, for all those places   that we identified as priority places against  the scoring mechanism, anywhere in the UK that   scored above 74.25 got money. In Scotland,  the threshold was slightly lower, at 72.25.

There are slightly different methods of  allocation for the long-term plan for   towns. For levelling up partnerships—the money  that is going to the Western Isles, the Borders,   Dundee, and Argyll and Bute—we worked with the  Scottish Government on a shared methodology. It  

Is a composite methodology that incorporates  some of the metrics that I have mentioned,   in terms of levelling up need, and  some information from the Scottish   Government related to access to services and  depopulation, so the process is transparent. Of course, some local authorities that have  

Not yet received funding—Angus and Perth and  Kinross—are disappointed, which I understand,   but we want to work with them because there  are other ways in which we can support them. To take a case in point, Dundee was understandably  disappointed not to receive an investment zone or  

A green freeport, but the objective metrics  that we used meant that we could enter into   a levelling up partnership with Dundee. I have  to say that the Scottish National Party leader   of Dundee Council, John Alexander,  although he was initially disappointed,  

Has been a very constructive partner in making  the case for UK Government investment in Dundee. That is a helpful update. Would it be  your view that, since your attendance   at this committee two years ago, there are now  better relationships between the UK Government  

And the Scottish Government, in terms  of assessing what those criteria are? I believe so. That has been influenced  by the work of the committee and our   engagement with the Convention  of Scottish Local Authorities at   a corporate level and individual  leaders at local government level.

When it comes to those local authorities that are  disappointed and which have not been successful,   is there a process by which they can be made  fully aware of where the criteria were not met   and why their bid failed? Do they understand  exactly why their bid was not successful?

I would hope so, yes. Bids will also be  assessed on the basis of deliverability,   and some people might think that we are  taking a more critical view of their capacity   to deliver than is actually the case. However,  we have a team of UK Government civil servants  

That is based in Scotland and is led by a  wonderful civil servant called Lauren Bruce   that will work with any local authority  or, indeed, any institution in order to   ensure that it understands the bidding process.  Obviously, some bids—this is about a smaller  

Pot in the community ownership fund—will be  put forward by individual institutions and   communities below the local government level.  Lauren Bruce and her team also work with them. There have been some successful bids from  communities in Perth and Kinross and Angus. Even   though the local authority may  not have received the money,  

The community has. The Rannoch Hub in  Perth and Kinross received money—I think   that that was around £250,000—because  of a successful community-led bid. Again, that is very helpful. I would like to raise one further point, if I  may. Another question that we had at that time was  

About the data that were being used to underpin  the criteria that you have just spoken about,   on productivity, unemployment, rurality and so  on. Two years ago, we were a little concerned   about the fact that some of that, which came  largely from the Office for National Statistics,  

Was maybe not quite the same  data that was being used to   assess what was happening in the Scottish  economy. Has that problem been ironed out? I hope so. The UK Government and the  Scottish Government have a concordat on   the use of ONS data. My understanding is  that, even though there may be different  

Interpretations of the data,  there is a shared database. I am very keen to ensure that,  just as the committee needs the   best possible data to scrutinise the  Scottish Government’s performance,   the Scottish Government and the committee  get access to our data as well. If the  

Committee feels that there is, for any reason,  a better or fairer interpretation of the data   by the Scottish Government than by the UK  Government, we will take that into account. Again, that is helpful. It is important  that we have the ability to scrutinise  

Whether the money that is awarded  is being spent in the right place   and whether that is done on  an objective and fair basis. Mr Gove, the term “levelling up” suggests to  me that areas that or people who are poorer  

Or further down the scale—or however they are  described—should be pulled up nearer the areas   or people at the top. That is a real emphasis on  need. However, from some of the answers that you   have given to Ms Smith and others, there seems to  be the idea of a geographic spread of the money  

That goes out. I wonder whether those two things  are compatible. Some people would have expected   all the money to go to really needy areas and  no money to go to Aberdeenshire, despite the   fact that Aberdeenshire might have some pockets  of deprivation. How do you square those things?

In a way, you have put the case  very fairly. We allocate the   money against objective criteria.  As you have quite rightly said,   the nature of need varies according to  geography as well as economic factors. A point that was very well made by  members of the committee the last time  

I appeared before it was about the way in which  EU funding recognised that in the past—hence the   significant share of EU funding that went to  the Highlands and Islands. That was because   of the particular productivity and connectivity  challenges that communities there face. However,  

I would argue that we have seen, particularly,  for example, through the long-term partnership   for towns and the towns with which we have been  working, a recognition that Clydebank, Coatbridge,   Greenock, Irvine and Kilmarnock are all  communities with enormous talent and potential—I  

Think that we would all agree on that—but  they have not always benefited from the   broader economic growth that  the UK as a whole has enjoyed. We seek to ensure that funding goes  to areas in which productivity has   been lower in the past and there is  a chance for it to improve. However,  

We also recognise that, by its very nature,  Scotland—like the whole of the UK—has diverse   communities that we need to stitch in to the  broader pattern of growth and prosperity. Is it too early to say whether  any of that has been successful?  

I realise that a lot of the  money is still to be spent. Yes. When will we be able to make a  judgment as to whether the UK,   and some of those communities,  have been levelled up? In our levelling up white paper we set out a  series of UK-wide missions, which depend on  

Partnership to succeed. Some in the Scottish  Government have criticised the establishment   of those missions, but we feel that, as a UK  Government, we have a responsibility to set   out our ambition for the whole UK, and I think  that it is a legitimate area of political debate  

Whether we have set the right missions. We are  holding ourselves to account on everything from   educational improvement to improved public health  and improving productivity. As we are explicitly   saying, we need to show that we are improving  the way in which research and development  

Money is allocated outside London and the  south-east, for both the public sector and   the private sector. For public health, we  want to close the gap between the poorer   and wealthier areas of the country  according to a number of metrics.

I think that most people would agree that the  missions that we have set are quite challenging,   and we are happy to be held to account for them.  On a day-to-day basis, another thing will be   delivery. The choice of the Inverness and Cromarty  green freeport was driven by a recognition of the  

Various efforts to ensure an industrial presence  in that part of the Highlands over the years,   some of which have been more successful than  others. That is our commitment to ensuring   that the skilled workers in that part of Scotland  have an industrial future. The good news reported  

In The Press and Journal today suggests that  that at least is moving in the right direction. I wonder whether the amounts of money involved  will make a significant difference. Glasgow is   not the biggest city in the UK, but it is fairly  large. We got £13 million to upgrade a set of  

Dilapidated stables in quite a wealthy part of  the city, and the £15 million for Drumchapel   is very welcome. That is £28 million. You  have already mentioned the investment zone,   too. Those investments are only  scratching the surface in Glasgow,  

However. Would the amounts not need to  be a lot higher to make a real impact? Again, it is important to see things in  context. The UK shared prosperity fund   is also giving £22 million to Glasgow, and we have  committed to some specific investment—alongside  

The investment zone—in innovation. The Smart  Things Accelerator Centre—STAC—is an investment   that we have made in Glasgow, alongside the  investment zone, in order to stimulate growth. I take your point about the Pollok  stables, but that bid was made by  

Glasgow City Council, and it was backed by the  leader of the council. It will contribute to   making the existing ecosystem around the  Burrell Collection even more attractive   for tourism. That work also contributes to the  educational offer. As you know, although that  

Area of the city is relatively prosperous, it  is adjacent to areas of significant deprivation. You have mentioned the long-term plan  for towns, and the seven towns that were   chosen, a number of times. Can you say a little  more about how the seven towns were chosen?

Yes. We have a set of criteria. We ranked  local authorities by levelling up need,   using the metrics in the levelling up white paper.  The metrics included pay, productivity, skills and   health, as I mentioned before. We also considered  population size and levels of deprivation. We  

Excluded local authorities without built-up areas  within the population thresholds for towns—which   is about 20,000 to 100,000. One can always  argue for a greater degree of flexibility, but   we thought that that was the right way to define  a town. The most deprived built-up area within  

Each of the local authorities identified was then  selected, using the index of multiple deprivation. We used the specific Scottish index of multiple  deprivation, which I think is derived in a   slightly different way from the IMD in England.  We then had a cap of no more than three local  

Authorities for each particular region, and  the top seven eligible local authorities were   selected. The list, therefore, is: Clydebank  in West Dunbartonshire; Coatbridge in North   Lanarkshire; Dumfries in Dumfries and Galloway;  Elgin in Moray; Greenock; Irvine, which is North   Ayrshire; and Kilmarnock,  which is in East Ayrshire.

It all seems very complex. Clearly you, the  councils and the Scottish Government all have   staff doing quite a lot of work on this, with  you analysing the figures, councils putting in   bids in the competitive process and so on. In  retrospect, do you think that having so many  

Funds with so many factors has been the best way  of allocating the money? You could have just said,   “Well, based on SIMD or whatever, we will  top up the housing budget across the UK”,   and that would have been pretty welcome in  most council areas and would have saved all  

The analysis and the applications.  Would that not have been better? The work here has been done, for the most part,  by the UK Government, with statistics and support   from the Scottish Government. However, it is  in the nature of levelling up and, indeed,  

Public policy that you need different tools  to help different areas. In some parts of   the country, there is already a mix of talent  and skills, and additional intervention can   catalyse that into economic growth. There will  be other areas with, say, connectivity issues,  

And that will be the intervention  that will be required to level up. Again, when Shona Robison is thinking about  allocating the money in the Scottish Government   budget, she and her team will have to undertake  some quite complex trade-offs, but she is doing  

That to ensure that she can get the right  tax mix, as she sees it, and get the right   spending interventions, as she and the First  Minister see them. Yes, sometimes there is   work for local authorities to do in the bidding  process, but most of the assessment work is done  

By the UK Government, and the work that local  government is doing is, in a way, about testing   its ability to deliver some of these projects.  Without wanting to put words in people’s mouths,   I would say that although many in local government  will prefer a straightforward allocation process,  

They also recognise some of the benefits of  a competitive process alongside that, too. I wanted to touch on one other area. Some  of the councils that we spoke to talked   about the need for more flexibility on, say,  timescales, with East Lothian, for example,  

Saying that it would be good to have a  five-year funding model to allow it to plan   ahead. On another note, Renfrewshire and  Aberdeenshire both said that numeracy was   not really a priority for them and that  they would have liked to have used the  

Money for literacy or something else. Is  there enough flexibility in the schemes? That is a fair challenge. The  first thing is that I would   very much like a longer-term  approach throughout; indeed,   that is one of the things that we are discussing  with regard to the current spending review.

I would point out that the Scottish Government’s  budget—that is, Shona Robison’s budget—is also   a one-year settlement, for reasons that I well  understand. That is not a criticism, but just   an observation; I am sure that she, like me,  would prefer to have a longer-term framework,  

And we want to work with local authorities  in order to achieve that. I note that   “Our Long-Term Plan for Towns” explicitly  creates a longer—indeed, 10-year—framework,   and that is the direction of travel that I  would love to be going in, because it would  

Give people certainty about their relationship  with the UK Government over that longer term. On your second question, which was on  learning, we are always open to the   need for a greater degree of recognition of  the lived experience of local authorities. Thank you.

Good morning, secretary of state. You have set  out some detail of the application processes   and assessment criteria for the levelling up  fund, the community ownership fund and the   long-term plan for towns, which is welcome.  Why did the process for investment zones in  

Scotland diverge so significantly from  the process in all those other areas? We developed a methodology jointly with the  Scottish Government. On investment zones as a   principle, there had been enterprise zones in  the past—they were the brainchild of Michael   Heseltine—and Enterprise zones were also created  at the beginning of the coalition Government.  

In the brief period when Liz Truss was Prime  Minister, she thought about investment zones being   spread very far and wide across the UK and being  driven primarily by deregulation. Once Jeremy Hunt   became chancellor and Rishi Sunak became Prime  Minister, we wanted a more targeted approach that  

Was built around areas of research excellence, and  we wanted to make sure that, in Scotland, we could   align those with Scotland’s regional economic  partnerships. That is why we developed a shared   approach, first with Kate Forbes and then with  her successors, to identifying appropriate areas.

In England, an invitation to make applications  was published on 2 October 2022, which included   guidance for the expression of interest, and  those investment zones were announced in the   budget on 15 March 2023. In Scotland, there  was no bidding or invitation process at all.  

Neil Gray answered a written question  from me in July last year, saying that “The invitation to host an Investment Zone was  not subject to a bidding or application process”.— Again, why the divergence? The divergence was partly because local  authorities in Scotland said that they did  

Not want to go through a bidding process.  Some local authorities have made the point   that the process of bidding can  be resource intensive and that,   if you put a bid together in a particular  way, it can consume scarce resource. That  

Reflects some of the learning from the green  freeport process. I believe that a competitive   process can be a useful way to test the  ability of local government to deliver— I am sorry to interrupt, but, on that point,   you said that local authorities  did not want a competitive process. Yes.

Were all local authorities asked? We have 32 local  authorities in Scotland. You are saying that they   were asked whether they wanted to bid for  enterprise zones and they said that they did   not want to. I made a freedom of information  request for all correspondence on this,  

And I did not see any evidence  that local authorities were   asked whether they wanted to have  a bidding process or an investment. My understanding is that local authorities in  Scotland said that they would prefer not to have a  

Bidding process. It is certainly the case that we  wanted to deliver enterprise zones in partnership   with the Scottish Government, and we agreed with  the Scottish Government that we would score each   of Scotland’s regional economic partnerships  against their economic and innovation potential,   their wellbeing economy need and the  strength of their knowledge anchors  

And other sectoral strengths. On that  basis, we came to an agreed solution. Again, I would stress that, with all our levelling  up interventions, wherever possible, we have   wanted to work with the Scottish Government to  find a way to allocate resources appropriately.

Do you not think that it was not even  suboptimal but really unacceptable that the   selection criteria and process were published  only retrospectively—seven weeks after the   decision was announced? Again, that is in stark  contrast to what happened in the English process.

I do not think so, no. We wanted to ensure that  we delivered investment zones relatively speedily,   and the choice of investment zones complements the  other interventions that we have made elsewhere. From my point of view, the process is to seek  partnership with the Scottish Government wherever  

Possible and to accommodate ourselves to the  Scottish Government’s priorities. Theoretically,   the UK Government could say that it is going  to create and direct investment zones in this   area or that area, with that geography or  this geography, but the Scottish Government  

Has made its own decisions about the economic  geography of regional and economic partnerships,   so we work with that. To editorialise slightly  again, the argument is sometimes made that the   UK Government careers around like some sort of  economic XL bully dog, deciding what it will do in  

Scotland willy-nilly, but, in fact, the reality  is partnership with the Scottish Government. You stress the issue of transparency, but I am  disappointed that you think it is acceptable   for the process not to be published ahead of  time. Let me draw you into the speculation  

Around this in a lot of the coverage at the time.  The investment zones were allocated in Glasgow,   where the SNP is defending seats in the  general election, and in Aberdeenshire,   where the Conservatives are defending seats in  the general election. Do you understand that,  

In the absence of published criteria and  a process ahead of time, you open up both   parties—the Conservatives and the SNP—to  accusations of the kind that I am making? All sorts of allegations are sometimes flung,  but the fact that the criteria were published  

Means that people can judge the basis on  which the allocation was made. I would never   want to rule out Conservative electoral prospects  anywhere, but we are allocating funds, as I said,   to Clydebank, Coatbridge, Greenock, Irvine and  Kilmarnock, and I do not think that they are yet  

On our target list for the next general  election, though hope springs eternal. I quite understand that folk will speculate about  political motivation behind this, but overall,   if you look at that spread of investment and  some of the areas that we are investing in,  

There is no electoral benefit for the  Conservative Party. There is a benefit   for the communities concerned  and the whole United Kingdom. Do you understand my frustration? You mentioned  the case of Dundee. Although I am a native   Dundonian, I represent the whole of North East  Scotland and I am very welcoming of investment  

In Aberdeenshire and Aberdeen. However, in Dundee  we have particular economic need, which you have   set out. We also have the finest life sciences  university in the UK, which has been top of   the research excellence framework for the  past 14 years. It is absolutely outstanding  

And well ahead of any other institutions in  Scotland and parts of the rest of the UK. There is consternation at the  absence of published criteria,   and there is real local anger. If you had seen the  press clippings at that time, secretary of state,  

You would have understood that. The local paper,  The Courier , was in uproar at the fact that we   had not received a green freeport or an investment  zone. Do you want to see from now on, in these   joint enterprises between yourselves and the  Scottish Government, bidding criteria set  

Out ahead of time so that local authorities  can build the right criteria, make the right   case and make the argument that I have just  made for the particular need of a geography? I will say two things. First, the criteria were  set out and people can judge objectively whether  

The right decision was made on investment  zones according to those criteria. Secondly,   the levelling up partnerships were chosen not  through a competitive process, but through an   allocative process—again, with criteria agreed  with the Scottish Government and subsequently laid  

Out. One of the levelling up partnerships that  we set up was, of course, with Dundee. Thirdly,   there has been UK Government investment in  Dundee—most conspicuously and most brilliantly   through the V&A. However, it is also the case—you  are right—that the University of Dundee and the  

James Hutton Institute are outstanding higher  education institutions, as is Abertay University. Dundee has a lot going for it, and the  levelling up partnership that we have set   up with Dundee was, I think, welcomed by the  leader of Dundee City Council. There had been  

Some upset beforehand, and I remember not just  the front page of The Courier being disappointed   that Dundee did not get an investment, but  the front page of The Press and Journal when   Aberdeen missed out on being a green freeport.  At the time, the accusation was made that the  

Government’s approach towards Aberdeen  was ABBA—anywhere but bloody Aberdeen. At various points, civic leaders  have expressed their desire to   ensure that they benefit from UK  Government funding. Naturally,   when location A wins out over location  B, there is a sense of disappointment. My broader point, though, is that the  levelling up programme has resulted  

In stronger relationships between  the UK and Scottish Governments,   between the UK Government and local government in  Scotland, and between the UK Government and civil   society and business. A few years ago there  was scepticism about our embarking on that  

Route and using the financial assistance power,  but it has now become part of the architecture   of the United Kingdom. Although I understand—and  share—people’s frustration about not winning out,   whatever their particular concerns about  the process might have been, overall, the   act of the UK Government’s supporting local  government in Scotland has been widely welcomed.

I have to say that I remain sceptical about the   process, Mr Gove. On 14 September, Neil Gray  told the Scottish Parliament that the selection   process and the decision on the investments  had been agreed on the same date, 22 June.

If I might test the convener’s indulgence, I  will close my questioning with a question on   spending. We are talking about allocations,  but are there not real challenges in getting   the money spent by local authorities? Do we not  risk replicating the situation with the city  

Deal process, for which applications  went in more than a decade ago? Many   of those projects across Scotland have  not materialised, because that money has   not actually been spent in communities. Are  you concerned about spend versus allocation? Yes. We want to ensure that, once money  has been allocated, it hits the sides,  

As it were, and makes a real contribution. That  is why, on a recent visit to Aberdeen, I was so   pleased to see that both the demolition and the  construction work going on just behind Union   Street, which you will have seen, is proceeding,  through the first round of levelling up funding,  

In order to enhance the city centre. When I  visited Cromarty freeport, I was excited to   see the investment that was going in there and  the changes that were occurring on the ground.   Ditto when I visited Pollok stables and sawmills  in Glasgow. We absolutely will work with local  

Government in Scotland and the Scottish Government  to ensure that that cash translates into action. Good morning, secretary of state. I want to follow  up John Mason’s line of questioning on the length   of time for which funding is provided.  Before I do so, I note that, yesterday,  

The Welsh Government published a report by the  independent commission on the constitutional   future of Wales. It included interesting  research on public opinion across the UK,   including on whether—and, if so, when—the UK  Government should spend in devolved areas. Only  

5 per cent of people in Scotland thought  that it should do so whenever it wanted,   while 18 per cent thought that it should not do so  normally or without consent but that there might   be circumstances in which it should. That  is lower than the percentage of people who  

Thought that the UK Government should legislate  in devolved areas, which was also quite low. Regardless of the fact that people  welcome funding coming to their area   and that many projects have merit, are you  not concerned about the core democratic point,   which is that people in Scotland—the  findings for which are not particularly  

Different to those for England or Wales—do  not believe that the UK Government should   spend directly in devolved areas? They  seem to prefer money being given to the   Scottish Government or directly to local  authorities to decide how to spend it.

I will make two points. First, as I mentioned  earlier, the Scottish Government has £41 billion   in the form of a block grant to spend as  it believes appropriate. In comparison,   although the amount of money that the UK  Government is spending is significant and  

Welcome and has been appreciated by folk in local  government, the overwhelming majority of public   spending in Scotland—excluding that on reserved  areas such as welfare and defence—is within the   control of the Scottish Government and comes  under the scrutiny of the Scottish Parliament. The performance of the public  services that so many people  

Rely on in Scotland—including the national  health service, the education system and   the justice system in responding to crime—is  affected by money that is in the hands   of, and that is spent by, the Scottish Government.  I would love to be able to support the Scottish  

Government in the area of education, for example,  but we respect the devolution settlement and   the fact that policy setting and spending in that  area should be done by the Scottish Government. However, in relation to the economic development  of the UK overall, I think that our partnership  

With local government and the Scottish Government  is a partnership for good. We share an island,   a currency and institutions. As I said, the  wonderful green freeports in the Highlands   and in the Firth of Forth are projects  in which the UK Government, alongside the  

Scottish Government and local government,  can use its leverage to make a difference. It is never the case that we impose spending;  we always have willing partners. When Kate   Forbes was finance secretary, she did a  brilliant job in ensuring that the Scottish   Government’s interests were represented in  the design of the green freeport process.

It is a partnership, but it is not a partnership  of equals, because, ultimately, the UK Government   decides how its money is spent. Regardless of  whether it is spending £100 or £100 billion in   Scotland, I am interested in your thoughts  on the core point, which is that the vast  

Majority of people in Scotland do not think  that the UK Government should be the Government   that spends money in devolved areas. If the  spending is in reserved areas, it is a totally   different issue. The core point is that a  lot of the money that we are talking about is  

Being spent in devolved areas. Regardless of  whether the individual projects are welcome,   the vast majority of people do not believe  that the UK Government should be making   those decisions. They would prefer the  UK Government to give the money to the   institutions that people in Scotland have  decided should make such decisions—either  

The Scottish Government or local authorities.  Why do you think that only a very small minority   of people in Scotland believe that the UK  Government should spend in devolved areas? A very distinguished group of people worked on  the independent commission on the constitutional  

Future of Wales, but it is only one poll.  You could ask the question in a different   way. For example, if you asked people whether  they believed that the UK Government should   work with the Scottish Government and local  authorities to increase prosperity and that  

The UK Government should use some of its  own money to help some of the most deprived   communities in Scotland to achieve more, I  think that people would say, “Yes—absolutely.” I will move on, because I  am conscious of the time.

When John Mason made a point about the length of  time for which funding is provided, you compared   the situation with the Scottish Government’s  annual budget. You mentioned having sympathy   for the finance secretary, but I point out  that the Scottish Government provides annual   funding because your Government gives the  Scottish Government an annual settlement.  

Your Government has the power to give multiyear  settlements. If you wanted to advocate for that   around the Cabinet table, I think that you would  find cross-party support for your doing so. Some local authorities that gave evidence  to the committee said that the three-year  

Funding model for the shared prosperity fund  compares pretty poorly with the seven-year   funding model for EU structural funds. In  particular, they highlighted that the delays   in releasing funds meant that, with a lot  of projects, there was a two-year dash to  

Deliver. If funding was released only at the  end of December 2022, local authorities had   only one quarter of that financial year left  in which to spend the money, so there was,   in essence, a two-year dash to spend it. Do  you recognise the concerns that, particularly  

For multiyear capital projects, two years—or,  in the case of the evidence that we received,   two and a quarter years—is a very short window  of time and that that might not result in best   value for money because there is a push to get  the money out the door before the deadline?

Yes, I recognise that. Obviously, we recognise  that some projects are long-term ones. As I   mentioned earlier, our allocation of funding  to towns is part of a long-term plan for towns   over 10 years. That will help to create a  sense of buy-in, with there being community  

Ownership of how the money is spent. If  we could move increasingly to that model,   that would be great. That is exactly the  direction of travel that we want to undertake,   but I operate within our  spending review envelopes. I would say that EU funding was often  not shaped by communities in the way  

That our funds have been. We believe  very strongly in devolution in its   fullest sense and in ensuring that not just  the Scottish Government and Scottish local   authorities but individual communities are  partners. That is what the long-term plan   for towns is about, and it is what the  community ownership fund is about, too.

In that case, why have you gone for a three-year  funding period, not, say, five, seven or 10 years? Again, where we can enter into longer-term  partnerships—as I have said, the long-term   plan for towns does just that—we will do  so. However, the spending review process  

Has generally operated on a three-year cycle  for the UK Government and, indeed, other   Governments. If we could embed a greater degree  of certainty of funding, that would be great. I should add that, with investment zones and  green freeports, the tax and other benefits that  

Had been put in place for just five years  are now in place for 10 years. Obviously,   a future UK Government could change that, but  my sense is that the initial scepticism that   some had towards the idea of green freeports has  been dissipated by the significant investment in  

Renewables and green energy that we have seen. As  I have said, when I visited the Cromarty freeport,   I thought that it was fantastic to see  Scotland retaining its cutting-edge position   as a renewables superpower through combined  Scottish Government and UK Government investment.

Some of us still retain significant concern about  the freeports, but that is a separate debate. Finally—and briefly—secretary of state,  have you ever raised concerns with any   of the chancellors with whom you have  worked or with Treasury officials that   the spending review periods are resulting in  the UK Government not getting best value for  

Money and that they are limiting the options  in your portfolio to develop multiyear funding   models that would provide better value  for money as well as greater certainty? One thing that I have learned is that, if  you want to get something out of a finance  

Minister, you do not discuss publicly the  conversations that you have had with them. Having engaged in budget negotiations myself, I   can sympathise with that  point at least. Thank you. Good morning, secretary of state. I just wanted  to ask a number of questions, particularly about  

The kinds of projects that are under way. As of 31  March last year, of the 404 projects funded under   rounds 1 and 2, 10 had not started; 333 were under  way; five had been completed; and 51 were expected  

To be completed by the end of March this year.  How do you measure the progress of such schemes   and how that progress compares with previous EU  schemes? Obviously, it will be a reflection of the   processes that are involved in applications  et cetera as well as on-going monitoring.

Yes, we have a programme of monitoring and  evaluation. It is also the case that the   National Audit Office and other UK-wide bodies  look at the effectiveness of our delivery. I have not drawn any direct comparisons between  the speed or effectiveness of delivering our  

Programme and the delivery of EU programmes,  but that would be very welcome. One of the   strengths of devolution is that we can see  how effective partnership working has been   in the different parts of the United Kingdom  and then learn from each other. As we look  

At how all these projects have been delivered,  we will be able to identify, say, those local   authorities in Scotland that have been much more  effective in the operational delivery of capital   investment than some of the local authorities  in England. I would want to be able to say to  

My counterparts in England, “Let’s look at  what’s happened. Let’s look at the way in   which Shetland or Orkney or Aberdeenshire or  Dundee has delivered and learn from that.” And that would be part of a kind of appraisal  process that you would be looking at. Exactly.

I am conscious of the time, so I will move on. I think that John Mason raised the issue  of the flexibility of the processes. I am   interested in the flexibility of the cash, and  my point probably refers more to the city region  

Deals. For example—I know that you are aware  of the subject of the Corran Narrows ferry   crossing—the UK Government recently announced that  around £20 million of the funding that was part of   the Inverness and Highlands city region deal could  be used for infrastructure for that crossing,  

Which is vitally important. That was welcomed  by Highland Council, but many in the local   community were more interested in a replacement  ferry. There had already been flexibility in the   use of the cash from the UK Government.  How much additional flexibility is there  

In those sorts of schemes? I appreciate that  that is a question of working with partners. I want to give the maximum amount  of flexibility. As I think you know,   I talked to Highland Council about that and  I know that the problems with the ferry are  

Adding more than an hour, at least, to travelling  times for people in that part of the Highlands.   We know that it would require significant capital  investment, but we want to see what can be done. Obviously, it is the case that, if you give some  local authorities additional flexibility above and  

Beyond that which other local authorities have  enjoyed, some might say, “Hey, this money came   with some strings attached, and we understand  that, but now you’re providing a greater degree   of flexibility between revenue and capital  for that local authority.” However, as you  

Rightly point out, each case is a specific case  and, here, we have communities that, in effect,   have been reliant on a particular piece of  infrastructure. When that infrastructure has   been faulty, the daily lives of hundreds, or  thousands, of people have been disrupted and,  

Therefore, we want to work with  Highland Council to address that. I suppose that, with that and any other example,   that has to be balanced with not eroding the  original objectives and targets of the funding. Yes, exactly. You have highlighted the issues around islands  and island groups. I am from Orkney, and I am  

Well aware of the importance of the Fair Isle  ferry funding as part of the levelling up fund.   Shetland Islands Council said that, in essence,  that saved Fair Isle as a populated island. You   spoke about the islands forum group and the new  group that will be looking at islands connectivity  

And transport in particular. When do you hope that  there will be further updates or progress on that? There should be a meeting of the islands  forum in Anglesey in six weeks’ to a   couple of months’ time. I hope that we  will be able to provide an update then.

Thank you for mentioning the leadership that was  shown by Shetland Islands Council. As you said,   if it had not been for Shetland  Islands Council’s leadership and   the commitment that we were able to  make through the levelling up fund,  

The very future of Fair Isle as a populated  island would have been under threat. That   would have been a terrible outcome for  the Shetlands and Scotland overall. As the committee knows, the issue of  ferries is a particularly challenging  

One. The fact that investment in ferries was made  a generation ago means that, across the islands in   Scotland, there is a need for new investment in  ferries. For Orkney in particular, intra-Orkney   ferries require attention, and we have been  talking to Orkney Islands Council about that.

With regard to the whole Caledonian  MacBrayne fleet, as the committee knows,   the Scottish Government has had  its challenges. We want to use   our resource and analytical ability to  look at connectivity overall and see   what more could be done to ensure that those  island communities get the connectivity that  

They deserve. I believe that the UK Government  has been able to bring to bear an additional   level of support for those communities  whose economic interests matter so much. That is very welcome, and I am sure that that will   be well received in the islands.  Thank you, secretary of state.

Good morning, Mr Gove. Thanks for joining  us. Is it not the case that the real reason   why the money for all these funds cannot match EU  funding is that the UK is trading broke? The debt   to gross domestic product ratio is nearly  at parity and the cost of servicing UK debt  

Interest is £380 million a day. Is that not  the real reason—that the UK is trading broke? I do not think so. My understanding is that  the percentage of UK trade with the EU has— In using the term “trading broke”,  

I am referring to the debt to GDP  ratio. Debt is 98 per cent of UK GDP. Yes—so, moving on to debt, as I think the  committee well understands, we have the   level of debt that we do primarily because of  the Covid pandemic. As a polity, the United  

Kingdom had one of the most generous levels  of support for people during Covid. Furlough,   Covid business interruption loans and so  on meant that we were supporting business   and civil society more generously than other  countries, and that inevitably created a cost.

As the committee will know, the impact of war in  Ukraine and instability in the middle east have   had an inflationary effect. I have spoken about  the steps that we have taken to reduce inflation,   but if we had not had the pandemic,  and if there was not a war in Ukraine,  

Scotland and England would  certainly have stronger economies. Of course, that is not actually the case.  The UK has been in economic decline,   and the figures are quite stark. I note that “In 1980 the UK’s GDP per capita was in line with  or exceeded most advanced economies. By 2019,  

The gap between UK GDP per capita and the small  advanced economies average had increased to 38%”. That is by the by, however, and I am aware of  the time, so I will come on to what I wanted  

To ask you about today. You have mentioned green  freeports a number of times. The important port   of Grangemouth is located in my constituency of  Falkirk East. You may recall that, the last time   you were in front of the committee, I asked you  about the role of, and your accountability to,  

Audit Scotland. One of the concerns that  have been expressed about freeports is   the possibility of corruption. The regulatory  environment is all managed by the UK Government. I will just flip over to the record of what  each of us said on that occasion. You said:

“I am accountable to the UK  Parliament, to Audit Scotland” and so on. I then asked: “What specific agreement have you made  with Audit Scotland in that respect ” You replied: “I am waiting for Audit Scotland to make any  suggestion to me about what it would like to do”.—

My first question therefore is whether  Audit Scotland has been in touch with   you or you have been in touch with  Audit Scotland, as to how the green   freeports can be given oversight to  avoid potential risks of corruption.

I do not think that I have received anything from  Audit Scotland myself. One of the benefits of the   union is that we have the Scottish Government  and the UK Government working together. Both   Neil Gray and I have an interest in ensuring  that the freeports are successful and that  

The money that is being spent and allocated  is appropriately and publicly accountable. It is for that reason that I am asking.  You will of course be well aware of the   potential for corruption in Teesside. I noted  with interest your decision to exclude the  

National Audit Office in England in setting  up your own investigation. The National Crime   Agency suggests that £262 billion is lost to  UK GDP each and every year as a result of money   laundering and corruption, so you will see my  interest in a stated role and full inclusivity  

For Audit Scotland, so there is no hint of  that at the green freeport in Grangemouth. I will ask this again. Given that Audit Scotland  has not been in touch with you—which I will pick   up with Audit Scotland—will you share any  findings with Audit Scotland as to what,  

If anything, has gone wrong  with the freeport in Teesside? I think that the committee knows that certain  allegations have been made of criminality and   sharp practice. That is why we set up an  independent inquiry led by independent   figures in local government of unimpeachable  integrity, who will be reporting on those  

Allegations. I would not want to pre-empt that  inquiry, but I would say two things. First,   I think that it is fair to say that no one  has contested the integrity or appropriateness   of the individuals who are conducting  that inquiry. Secondly, I think that,  

In both these parts of the United Kingdom—in  England and in Scotland—we should have an even   more vigorous exercise of scrutiny, on a shared  basis, of how money is spent and how public bodies   are performing. I am all for the maximum amount  of transparency—sunlight is the best disinfectant.

Just for the record, then, there can be  no possibility of your avoiding Audit   Scotland’s scrutiny of any potential risks  associated with green freeports in Scotland   and you will not seek to exclude it as you have  done with the National Audit Office in England.

Well, I did not seek to exclude the National  Audit Office. I wanted to make sure— Well, it is not involved, is it? It is playing  a very limited role in the current inquiry when   it should be leading it—and, certainly in  Scotland, I would expect any such inquiry,  

If it came to pass, to be led by Audit Scotland.  I appreciate that that is hypothetical, though. I think that there are two things here.  First, the National Audit Office actually   has a broader capacity for scrutiny of the  actions of the UK Government than Audit  

Scotland does of the Scottish Government—I  think. However, that is a matter for the   Scottish Government and Audit Scotland, not  for me. The Teesside allegations are being   investigated very rigorously by, as I have  said, figures of unimpeachable authority. One thing that one cannot ignore is the element  of small-p politics here—indeed, large-P politics.  

Allegations were made about the Teesside freeport  by some people who were critical of the mayor   of Tees Valley and who were, in fact, opposed to  the freeports themselves. For example, there were   allegations about dredging leading to crustacean  deaths and so on. Subsequent investigation showed  

That that was all nonsense and that the crustacean  deaths were due to entirely separate factors. As we both know, sometimes in politics people  will pick up a stick or make an allegation in   order to make a political point, but I am as  confident as confident can be—although I do not  

Want to pre-empt the inquiry—that Ben Houchen  is doing a great job and that the freeport   in Teesside is a success. I am also confident  that the freeport from which your constituents   benefit will go on to be a success, just as the  freeport in the Highlands will be a success, too.

For the record, just before I leave this—I  know that the convener wants to come back   in—you will submit yourself to the full scrutiny  of Audit Scotland if it looks under the covers   of what is happening in any green freeport in  Scotland. Just a simple yes or no will be fine.

Absolutely, 100 per cent yes. Thank you very much. Given that no one else has mentioned  the multiply programme so far,   I thought that I would touch on it. Secretary of state, you have talked  a lot about partnership working,   but South Ayrshire Council, a  Conservative-led authority, has said:

“the allocation for Multiply which  accounted for over 17% of … UK” shared prosperity fund “resources, was ring fenced … it is doubtful  whether South Ayrshire Council would have   determined such allocation if it had been given  discretion on this matter. The programme could  

Have been more effective by aligning and combining  both numeracy and literacy interventions. The   Multiply financial allocations follow an even  pattern. It will be challenging to spend” even “one third of our Multiply allocation”. Surely, if there has been partnership  working and not imposition, as you have said,  

That situation with a Conservative  authority would not be happening. You are right that South Ayrshire has  expressed that concern. Indeed, a previous   question—I cannot remember whether it  was from Michael Marra or from John   Mason—touched on the fact that Aberdeenshire  and Renfrewshire had raised similar concerns.

The overall purpose of the multiply programme,  which is to deal with one of the big problems   that we have across the United Kingdom—that  is, the relatively poor adult numeracy in some   communities—is, I think, a great national  endeavour. However, we learn from doing,  

And if we can build an evidence base to show that  some of the levelling up funding allocated through   multiply could be better allocated through other  interventions, we will absolutely look at that. The aim of multiply is not to address  what is happening in our schools at  

The moment—that is not what I am  talking about. I am talking about   the inherited issues that some have  with regard to being fully confident,   particularly in a world where numeracy  is becoming more and more important. It is becoming more important, but it seems odd  that the UK Government should even be involved in  

The multiply initiative, given that education  is completely devolved. If we are honest,   it has not been brought in through partnership  working. The UK Government has decided that it   is going to impose it on Scotland, and that is  it. I cannot think for a single minute that the  

Scottish ministers said, “Oh, that’s a great  idea.” They would have been happy if you had   allocated additional funding through the block  grant that they could spend on education,   but to come in and impose something on which  even Conservative authorities do not believe   they can fully utilise the allocated  resources is clearly a concern.

That is a series of fair points. First, as  I mentioned, this is a not an intervention   in schools but an intervention in skills. There  is a distinction there, because it is directly   related to our broad levelling up objectives  and economic growth and development. Secondly,  

South Ayrshire Council and others have made the  point that it has been difficult to deliver all   the funding that has been given. Again, that  argument could be interpreted in different   ways—one could be a lack of flexibility,  and another could be overgenerosity in the  

Area. We will learn from that and try to  develop a new approach. The third thing— I certainly do not think that accusations of  overgenerosity would come from any source,   but there certainly could be  accusations of a lack of flexibility.

The final thing that I would say, if you will  forgive me, convener, is that the debate about   skills and education is a hot topic. I have strong  views on it, and I do not want to labour them in  

This committee, but I want to make sure that  we can learn from each other—that Scotland,   England, Wales and Northern Ireland  can learn from each other in schools,   skills and higher education. In higher education,  UK Research and Innovation operates on a UK basis.

Given the challenges that the United  Kingdom and the next generation face,   having a proper civilised conversation about  what is working and what is not working in   our different jurisdictions in education  is a good thing. As I say, that is not for  

Me to decree—quite the opposite—but it is in  all our interests to have that conversation. I have to say that, unlike in England,  as has been pointed out by academics on   the cross-party group on life sciences,  which Michael Marra and I are members of,  

All the Scottish universities work together  in partnership, but the English ones do not. Yes, absolutely. I am quite sure that they would  be willing to work cross-border. We have to finish at noon, so we have only  a couple of minutes left, but I will say one  

Final thing before I wind up. Zoe Billingham,  director of the Institute for Public Policy   Research think tank, said that the National  Audit Office report on levelling up includes “a litany of missed deadlines, moving goalposts  and dysfunction in the way levelling up funds  

Have been allocated to councils as part  of the government’s flagship programme.” In Scotland, we have also had the imposition of  the United Kingdom Internal Market Act 2020, which   means that it cuts across devolved  policy. To give you the final word,   secretary of state, what will you do  differently to ensure that levelling up  

Is much more impactful and effective  for those it is trying to assist? I look forward to this committee’s recommendations  and the feedback from local government. We have   already improved the way in which we interact  with local authorities through the project  

Adjustment request that I mentioned earlier, which  allows people a greater degree of flexibility.   We are learning that, while still keeping a  competitive element, having a more allocative   approach in some of the projects helps. We  are also learning from work on the ground.

Sometimes good practice on the ground that we  can advertise and spread will help overall. We   have just been touching on the multiply programme.  Perth and Kinross Council has been using multiply   funding to give support to young entrepreneurs,  because a lack of full numeracy was the reason  

For business failure. The success of Perth and  Kinross in using multiply funding is one way of   spreading good practice, much as the success  so far of Aberdeen City Council in using its   money for urban regeneration will help us  to spread good practice elsewhere and the  

Success of Roy MacGregor and the team behind  the Cromarty freeport will help us elsewhere. Yes, the UK Government has lessons  to learn, but those lessons are best   learned from practitioners on the ground  in local government and in business.

Thank you very much for your time, secretary  of state—it is appreciated by members of the   committee. We hope that you will come back  to the committee in the near future. We had   hoped to see you in October 2022, and it  has been a long time since then. It would  

Be wonderful to see you in person, and we could  go into some of these subjects in greater depth.   The Scottish Parliament has an important  role to play in relation to scrutiny and   transparency of the funding, and the committee  looks forward to continuing its work with you.

Thank you very much, convener,  and I hope to be in Holyrood soon. Thank you. I call this meeting to a close.prev

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