1) Economics of Constitutional Change in Scotland
Submitting Institution
University of AberdeenUnit of Assessment
Economics and EconometricsSummary Impact Type
PoliticalResearch Subject Area(s)
Economics: Applied Economics
Studies In Human Society: Policy and Administration, Political Science
Summary of the impact
University of Aberdeen research into financial and economic relations
between Westminster and
Scotland has informed public debate concerning Scottish Constitutional
Change and influenced
Scottish and UK policy makers in light of Devolution in 1999 and the
Independence Referendum in
2014.
Impact emerged through two main channels: First, through UK Continental
Shelf (UKCS) research
investigating the nature and extent of shares of investment, production,
gross revenues and UK
treasury tax revenues attributable to an independent Scottish parliament.
Second, through
accurate research information about the Barnett formula's post-devolution
role in fiscal transfers
between Westminster and Scotland.
Underpinning research
Research demonstrating the economic importance of the UK oil and gas
industry on constitutional
change debate has been undertaken by Alex Kemp (Professor), Linda Stephen
(Research Fellow),
and Sola Kasim (Research Fellow) since 1999. It is complemented by
research relevant to Scottish
devolution elsewhere within the University of Aberdeen Business School,
such as work by David
Heald (Professor of Accountancy — submitted under UoA19) on the Barnett
formula and
constitutional change.
The paper by Kemp and Stephen (1999) used financial simulation modelling,
and produced
estimates of the investment and operating expenditures, gross revenues,
and tax revenues for the
hypothetical Scottish sector of the UK Continental Shelf since the
mid-1970s. This involved the
designation of a dividing line in the North Sea between the Scottish and
rest of UK sectors, as well
as the incorporation of complex tax arrangements for offshore oil and gas
and allocations of
various non-field specific costs to the two sectors.
Understanding the economics of the North Sea oil sector is essential to
produce reliable estimates
of the hypothetical Scottish shares. This was enhanced by the paper by
Kemp and Kasim (2006)
which developed an econometric model that highlighted the different
characteristics of the five
main geographic regions of the UK Continental Shelf (UKCS). Kemp and
Stephen (2008) used
financial simulation modelling to estimate the hypothetical Scottish
shares of expenditures and
revenues, the quality of which was enhanced by the earlier econometric
modelling by Kemp and
Kasim. Findings emphasised (1) the relatively large tax revenues which
would have accrued to a
Scottish government, but also (2) their extreme volatility. With an
inevitable decline in the longer
term, the implications are that an independent Scottish government should
be wary of relying
substantially on North Sea oil revenues for normal budget purposes. The
research concluded that
borrowing rights and an Oil Fund (i.e. a fund separated from normal
government revenues and
expenditures) are desirable to handle the volatility of the revenues. The
research over the years
was conducted with the aid of sponsorship from the Scottish Government, a
group of oil companies
and Scottish Enterprise.
A further issue central to the constitutional debate is the evolving role
of the Barnett formula.
Heald's Barnett formula expertise is widely acknowledged, as reflected in
the House of Commons
Justice Committee — Fifth Report (2009) which points out that it was Heald
who initially coined the
phrase `Barnett formula'. His publications on devolution and the formula
are numerous. Of interest
in this context is a paper, stemming from an ESRC funded project
undertaken in Aberdeen, Heald
and McLeod (2005), which tracks the implementation of the Barnett formula
since devolution in
three UK spending reviews of the early to mid-2000s in order to deepen
public understanding of
how devolution finance is embedded within the UK public expenditure
framework. It demonstrated
that the formula's implementation was far from transparent and there was
much more
governmental discretion in fiscal transfers between Westminster and
Scotland, Wales and
Northern Ireland than was previously recognised.
Heald's research was financed by the Nuffield Foundation (1997-98), the
ESRC Devolution
Programme (2001-03) and the Northern Ireland Economic Council (2001-03).
These awards
totalled £184,956.
References to the research
• Kemp A G and Kasim A S (2006). A Regional Model of Oil and Gas
Exploration in the
UKCS. Scottish Journal of Political Economy, 53, 2, 198-221. DOI:
10.1111/J.1467-9485.2006.00376.X
• Kemp A G and Stephen L (1999). Expenditures in and Revenues from the
UKCS:
Estimating the Hypothetical Scottish Shares 1970-2003. University of
Aberdeen,
Department of Economics, North Sea Study Occasional Paper, No. 70, 1-24.
http://hdl.handle.net/2164/2956
• Kemp A G and Stephen L (2005). Optimising Oil and Gas Depletion in the
Maturing North
Sea with Growing Import Dependence. Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 21,
1, 43-66.
DOI: 10.1093/oxrep/gri003
• Kemp A G, North Sea Oil and Gas, In A. Goudie (2013), Scotland's
Future: The Economics
of Constitutional Change. (Dundee University Press), 2013, 243-266.
Available from HEI on
request.
• Heald D A and McLeod A (2005). The embeddedness of UK devolution
finance within the
public expenditure system. Regional Studies, 39, 4, 495-518. DOI:
10.1080/00343400500128556
Details of the impact
The early study (Kemp and Stephen, 1999) broke new ground and has been
cited in the debate on
constitutional change since that time. The results of the economic
modelling of the hypothetical tax
take for historic years have been used in the recent report of the House
of Lords Select Committee
on Economic Affairs (see below). The study by Kemp and Stephen (2008) has
been used every
year since then by the (SNP) Scottish government in its yearly
publication, Government
Expenditure and Revenue, Scotland (ISBN: 978-1-78045-705-5) and was
also used by the Scottish
Government in their publication An Oil Fund for Scotland (2009)
(ISBN: 978-0-7559-8119-9). Kemp
and Stephen have been asked by the Scottish Government to update the oil
related estimates
every year since 2008. It should be noted no other reputable source of
information is available on
the hypothetical Scottish shares of production, investment, gross revenues
and tax revenues from
North Sea oil and gas. The modelling has widely been accepted as being
independent and reliable
in the on-going debate. Tax revenues would form a substantial part of a
Scottish Government
budget in the event of independence or enhanced devolution and an
understanding of their
potential size, volatility, and long term behaviour is clearly important
to the constitutional debate.
Professor Kemp was asked to give written and oral evidence to (1) the
House of Commons Select
Committee on Energy and Climate Change (March 2012) and (2) the House of
Lords Select
Committee on Economic Affairs (October 2012) on the implications of
Scottish independence for
the North Sea oil and gas industry. A major element in both instances
concerned petroleum
taxation and licensing issues. These related to (1) the intricate problems
of taxing the industry
separately in Scotland and the rest of the UK and (2) the likely size of
the tax revenues from the
Scottish sector. Kemp was able to call on his updated research to give
useful information on the
subject. The House of Lords Committee published its report in April 2013 (The
Economic
Implications for the United Kingdom of Scottish Independence, HL
Paper 152). The report
incorporates material from Kemp's modelling of the hypothetical Scottish
share of North Sea tax
revenues since 1976, and his Memorandum and Oral Evidence are published in
full. A further
publication by the Scottish Government entitled Maximising the Return
from Oil and Gas in an
Independent Scotland (ISBN: 978-1-78256-776-9) cited Kemp (2013) as
a credible source of
estimates of potential future oil production and decommissioning costs
relating to the likely Scottish
continental shelf.
Professor Kemp was invited to become a member of the Council of Economic
Advisers (2007-2011)
to the Scottish Government, where his expertise on oil and gas matters was
utilised. In
2008-2009 Kemp was appointed a member of the Independent Expert Group to
the Calman
Commission on Scottish Devolution. He was the lead author of the report
entitled Natural Resource
Taxation and Scottish Devolution: Evidence from the Independent Expert
Group to the
Commission on Scottish Devolution, www.commissiononscottishdevolution.org.uk/uploads/2009-
06-06-ieg-natural-resource-taxation-1.pdf
Professor Kemp was appointed a member of the Scottish Energy Advisory
Board to the Scottish
Government (chaired by the First Minister) in 2011 reflecting his
expertise in oil and gas matters.
Based on his research papers Kemp has given many TV interviews on the
subject of constitutional
change and North Sea oil and gas to the BBC and STV, radio interviews to
BBC Radio Scotland,
Radio 4, North Sound, and press interviews to The Financial Times, Times,
Scotsman, Herald and
Aberdeen Press and Journal. These indicate the wider impact effect on
public debate.
Professor Heald provided written expert evidence in 2009 to the Calman
Commission on Scottish
devolution that referenced his research, on how the Barnett formula
affects Scottish and UK public
finances. This public impact was further strengthened through his written
and oral evidence to
parliamentary committees investigating this controversial topic, with
frequent references to his
research and evidence in published reports. These include: participation
in the Round Table on the
Budget Process held by the Finance Committee of the Scottish Parliament
(10/06/2008); a private
seminar for the House of Lords Select Committee on the Barnett Formula
(14/01/09); and public
evidence to the Committee on Finance and Personnel of the Northern Ireland
Assembly (3/11/10).
On these occasions he communicated his findings that the operations of the
Barnett Formula have
not been properly documented, thereby eroding the transparency and
legitimacy of the devolution
finance settlement. His work is cited extensively by other witnesses to
the Calman Commission,
government Committees and Committee Reports.
Heald's research has also been exploited in government inquiries: the
Holtham Commission on
Welsh funding (private seminars on 09/12/08 and 23/09/09); the Calman
Commission on Scottish
devolution (invited seminars on 08/12/08 and 12/03/09); and the McKay
Commission on the
implications of devolution for the composition and role of the House of
Commons (oral evidence,
10/05/12).
Sources to corroborate the impact
1. Government Expenditure & Revenue Scotland. Yearly issues
2008-2009, 2009-2010,
2010-2011, 2011-2012, The Scottish Government.
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2010/06/22160331/0
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2011/06/21144516/0
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2012/03/9525/0
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2013/03/1859/downloads
2. House of Lords Select Committee on the Barnett Formula, The Barnett
Formula, 1st Report
of Session 2008-2009, London, Stationery Office, 2009.
a. http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld/ldbarnett.htm
3. House of Lords Select Committee on Economic Affairs, The Economic
Implications for the
United Kingdom of Scottish Independence 2nd Report, HL Paper
152, April 2013.
http://www.parliament.uk/business/committees/committees-a-z/lords-
select/economic-affairs-committee/inquiries/parliament-2010/economic-implications-
for-the-uk-of-scottish-independence/
4. The (Calman) Commission on Scottish Devolution, Serving Scotland
Better: Scotland and
the United Kingdom in the 21st Century, Calman Commission, 2009.
http://www.commissiononscottishdevolution.org.uk/
5. Independent (Holtham) Commission for Funding and Finance for Wales,
Fairness and
accountability: a new funding settlement for Wales, Cardiff, Welsh
Government, July 2010.
http://wales.gov.uk/icffw/home/report/fundingsettlement/?lang=en
6. An Oil Fund for Scotland, The Scottish Government, 2009.
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2009/07/28112701/0
7. Maximising the Return from Oil and Gas in an Independent Scotland, the
Scottish
Government, July 2013.
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2013/07/5746/downloads#res-1
8. First Minister of Scotland, Scottish Government, to corroborate the
impact Professor
Kemp's research work on North Sea oil and the Scottish economy.
9. Head of Edinburgh Office of UK Statistics Authority. To corroborate
Professor Kemp's
research work on quantifying North Sea oil and gas production, investment,
operating costs
and tax revenues attributable to Scotland.
10. Chief Economic Adviser to the Scottish Government. To corroborate
Professor Kemp's
research on North Sea oil and gas and the Scottish economy.