ECONOMICS experts have warned of a “really challenging period” for the Scottish Government as the bill for social security spending is projected to top £9 billion by the start of the next decade.
Spending on social security in Scotland totalled just over £6.1bn in 2024-25 but is forecast to grow to more than £9.4bn by 2030-31.
With the rise coming at a time when the UK Government is trying to cut its own welfare bill, economist Professor Graeme Roy, chairman of the Scottish Fiscal Commission (SFC), said that would leave Holyrood ministers increasingly having to fund more of the spending for this from its own budget.
The SFC revealed the amount the Scottish Government spends on social security, above what it receives from Westminster towards the cost of benefits, is “expected to increase from £0.9bn in 2023-24 to £2.2bn by 2030-31”.
Roy said: “In other words the government have to find £2bn either from taxation or other areas of spending to make the budget balance.”
Professor Graeme RoyHe highlighted this “widening gap on social security” as one of the financial pressures the Scottish Government will have to face.
Roy also said ministers will likely “have to find additional resources” to pay for public sector pay, with awards being made to workers already higher than the level set in the Government’s public sector pay policy.
He stated: “That means essentially money is going to have to be found from elsewhere in the budget in order to pay for pay awards coming in above the pay policy.”
Meanwhile, an “economic performance gap” means the Government is raising less from income tax than it would if Scotland’s economic performance matched that of the UK.
The SFC found that Scotland’s different policies on income tax should raise just over £1.67bn this year, but its report said the “actual projected income tax net position in 2025-26 is £616 million”.
As a result, Roy noted there was a “performance gap of about £1bn”.
He added: “That is an additional £1bn that is being foregone within the overall funding of the Scottish budget because of that relatively weaker economic performance.”
Roy noted that overall the funding to the Scottish Government “continues to increase”.
But he said: “Once you take into consideration things like social security commitments, when you take into consideration pay awards running ahead of the pay policy, when you take into consideration things like the national insurance increase, and the general pressure we are seeing on public service delivery, while funding is going up the spending pressures are continuing to go up at the same time.
“So the Government is continuing to work in a situation where they have really quite limited fiscal headroom to manage the pressures that they face.”
He added: “Funding is going up, but once you start to look at some of the commitments the Government have made it is going to be a really challenging period for the short and medium term.”
Finance Secretary Shona Robison said the report “recognises the challenging financial environment that Scotland continues to face as a result of global uncertainty and higher inflation”.
She added that the Scottish Government’s position was made worse by the “failure” of UK ministers to fully fund the increase in employers’ national insurance contributions in the public sector, as well as by the welfare reforms being pursued by Labour at Westminster.
Robison said the UK Government “must change course on these welfare cuts, as well as removing the two-child limit and reinstating the winter fuel payment”.
Speaking for the Scottish Government, she added: “By contrast, our social security policies are providing vital assistance to enable older people to heat their homes, help disabled people to live independent lives and keep thousands of children out of poverty.”
The Finance Secretary added: “Our investment in this area over and above the money we get from the UK Government is projected to be less than 3.5% of the total Scottish Government Resource Budget by 2029-30.”