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Government Expenditure and Revenue in Scotland 2004 - 2005

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Section 3: Expenditure

PESA splits the data on regional expenditure into three categories: identifiable expenditure, non-identifiable expenditure and accounting adjustments. GERS uses the data provided on identifiable expenditure directly and apportions Scottish shares of non-identifiable expenditure and accounting adjustments to produce an estimate of total expenditure.

Identifiable Expenditure

Identifiable expenditure is defined as expenditure that can be identified as having been incurred for the benefit of the population of a particular country/region. This is the fundamental "who benefits" principle. Alternatively, expenditure could be allocated to the country where it is incurred. In the latter case, the location of the beneficiaries of the service is not explicitly taken into account. In practice, the allocation under the two approaches is similar for most kinds of spending.

By convention, all Scottish Executive spending is regarded as being for the benefit of Scotland. In practice, some expenditure, classed as "identifiable", will inevitably be to the benefit of people residing outside of Scotland. For example, health facilities are not used solely by the residents of the region where they are located, and roads serve the needs of people beyond the area where they are built.

The data in this section are taken from Chapter 7 of the Treasury's Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses 2006, ( PESA 2006), which is compiled on a "who benefits" basis.

Identifiable Expenditure across the UK

Table 3.1 shows identifiable expenditure in the UK and its constituent countries. Scotland received 9.8 per cent of UK identifiable expenditure in 2004-05, which translates into the second highest per head expenditure after Northern Ireland. Scotland's identifiable expenditure on services per head is about 16 per cent higher than the UK average.

Data on total identifiable expenditure for all UK countries over the period from 2000-2001 to 2004-05 can be found in Section 6.

Table 3.1 Identifiable expenditure on services by country, 2004-05

Total

Per head

£ million

percentage of UK total

£

relative to UK ( UK = 100)

England

318,636

81.1%

6,361

96.9

Scotland

38,581

9.8%

7,597

115.8

Wales

21,400

5.4%

7,248

110.4

Northern Ireland

14,052

3.6%

8,216

125.2

UK

392,669

100.0%

6,563

100.0

Source: Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses 2006, Tables 7.1, 7.2.

Identifiable Expenditure by Programme

Table 3.2 shows identifiable expenditure allocated across the main spending programmes in Scotland and the UK. "Social protection" is by far the biggest expenditure programme and, together with "Health", accounts for 59.5 per cent of total Scottish identifiable expenditure. The third largest spending programme is "Education and training". As is to be expected, a similar pattern applies at the UK level.

Table 3.2 Identifiable expenditure on services by programme, 2004-05

Scotland

United Kingdom

Expenditure
£ million

Share of identifiable expenditure

Expenditure
£ million

Share of identifiable expenditure

General public services

841

2.2%

5,768

1.5%

International services

20

0.1%

233

0.1%

Defence

2

0.0%

4

0.0%

Public order and safety

1,911

5.0%

23,959

6.1%

Enterprise and economic development

625

1.6%

6,546

1.7%

Science and technology

238

0.6%

1,742

0.4%

Employment policies

802

2.1%

3,651

0.9%

Agriculture, fisheries and forestry

631

1.6%

5,193

1.3%

Transport

1,672

4.3%

15,666

4.0%

Environment protection

782

2.0%

6,345

1.6%

Housing and community amenities

1,279

3.3%

7,869

2.0%

Health

7,683

19.9%

81,930

20.9%

Recreation, culture and religion

931

2.4%

6,666

1.7%

Education and training

5,892

15.3%

65,417

16.7%

Social protection

15,271

39.6%

161,680

41.2%

Total

38,581

100.0%

392,669

100.0%

Source: Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses 2006, Tables 7.9a, 7.9b; own calculations.

Table 3.3 below shows Scottish identifiable expenditure on services per head in 2004-05 by value and relative to the UK, broken down by programme. Total Scottish identifiable expenditure per head amounted to £7,597 in 2004-05 which is £1,034 higher per head than the UK average.

The larger expenditure per head is reflected in the relative spending on programmes, notably in "Employment policies", "General public services", "Environment protection", "Housing and community amenities", "Social Protection" and "Agriculture, fisheries and forestry".

Table 3.3 Identifiable expenditure on services per head, 2004-05 (£)

Scotland

UK

Scotland relative to UK
( UK = 100)

General public services

166

96

172.9

Public order and safety

376

400

94.0

Enterprise and economic development

123

109

112.8

Science and technology

47

29

162.1

Employment policies

158

61

259.0

Agriculture, fisheries and forestry

124

87

142.5

Transport

329

262

125.6

Environment protection

154

106

145.3

Housing and community amenities

252

132

190.9

Health

1,513

1,369

110.5

Recreation, culture and religion

183

111

164.9

Education and training

1,160

1,093

106.1

Social protection

3,007

2,702

111.3

Total

7,597

6,563

115.8

Source: Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses 2006, Table 7.11; own calculations.

Within the UK, the levels of public expenditure vary from one constituent part to another, reflecting the needs rather than the wealth or tax capacity of an area.

There are many reasons for the differences in expenditure priorities in Scotland. In some cases, higher expenditure per head reflects the greater importance that particular activities have in Scotland than elsewhere. "Agriculture, fisheries and forestry" is a case in point. Scotland is also the most sparsely populated area in the UK, and lower population density raises programme costs, for example, in primary and secondary education.

Differences also occur because of variations in the distribution of activities between the public and private sectors. For example, water and sewerage services are a public sector responsibility in Scotland, and are included in the Scottish public expenditure totals.

In "Health" expenditure, Scotland's needs are greater for a number of reasons, including high death rates from circulatory diseases and cancer. Higher costs also accrue in "Education and training". There is traditionally a net inflow of students from the rest of the UK to Scotland and Scottish university courses are typically longer. The honours degree course takes four years, compared with a typical three-year course in England and Wales. Lastly, "Housing and community amenities" spending is relatively higher, because there is a higher proportion of housing stock in the public sector in Scotland.

Non-identifiable Expenditure

"Non-identifiable" expenditure is expenditure generally incurred on behalf of the UK as a whole. Table 3.4 shows total expenditure on services in the UK. The non-identifiable expenditure data are taken from PESA 2006 and form the basis for the calculations of Scottish non-identifiable expenditure. The data for the UK, presented here, also include identifiable expenditure outside the UK. This treatment is consistent with the view that expenditure outside the UK is non-identifiable from the perspective of the UK's constituent countries, as the benefits are shared between them. To make the Scottish non-identifiable expenditure comparable with UK data, this category is therefore included in UK non-identifiable expenditure.

UK Non-identifiable Expenditure

In 2004-05, UK non-identifiable expenditure was £75.6 billion, representing 16.2 per cent of UK total expenditure on services. Defence expenditure was the main item; it accounted for £28.6 billion, or 37.9 per cent of non-identifiable expenditure. The other principal segments of non-identifiable expenditure were "Debt interest" (32.5 per cent), "General public services" (9.9 per cent), "International services" (7.2 per cent) and "Public order and safety" (6.3 per cent).

Table 3.4 Expenditure on services in the UK, 2004-05 (£ million)

Identifiable1

Non-identifiable2

Total

Current

Capital

Current

Capital

General public services

4,670

1,098

6,743

736

13,247

EU transactions

0

0

-799

0

-799

International services

231

2

5,277

144

5,654

Debt interest

0

0

24,543

0

24,543

Defence

3

1

27,134

1,484

28,622

Public order and safety

22,881

1,078

4,252

537

28,748

Enterprise and economic development

4,071

2,475

542

90

7,178

Science and technology

1,362

380

588

102

2,432

Employment policies

3,530

121

10

0

3,661

Agriculture, fisheries and forestry

5,054

139

242

7

5,442

Transport

8,329

7,337

144

250

16,060

Environment protection

5,599

746

488

39

6,872

Housing and community amenities

3,134

4,735

0

0

7,869

Health

78,378

3,552

605

29

82,564

Recreation, culture and religion

5,425

1,241

123

98

6,887

Education and training

60,591

4,826

4

0

65,421

Social protection

161,300

380

2,188

0

163,868

Unallocated provision

0

0

0

0

0

Total

364,558

28,111

72,084

3,516

468,269

Source: Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses 2006, Tables 7.9a, 7.9b.
Notes: 1 Excludes identifiable spending outside the UK. - 2 Includes identifiable spending outside the UK.

Scottish Non-Identifiable Expenditure

There are a number of possible ways in which to allocate Scotland a share of UK non-identifiable expenditure. The Scottish share of the UK population (8.5 per cent in 2004) or of UK Gross Value Added less extra regio (8.2 per cent in 2004) or a more specific method, if available, could be used.

Scotland's share of non-identifiable service spending has been allocated primarily, but not exclusively, on a population basis - see Appendix A for more information.

The Scottish share of identifiable expenditure outside of the UK is allocated according to the population share (except EU transactions; see Appendix A) and included in non-identifiable expenditure.

Appendix A outlines a methodological issue concerning the underlying PESA data for non-identifiable expenditure by region and devolved administration. HM Treasury are currently reviewing these data with Whitehall departments and any subsequent data revisions will be incorporated into future GERS publications.

Table 3.5 Expenditure on services in Scotland, 2004-05 (£ million)

Identifiable

Non-identifiable 1

Total

Total

of which Scottish Executive 2

General public services

841

839

635

1,476

EU transactions

0

-316

-316

International services

20

460

480

Debt interest

0

2,086

2,086

Defence

2

2

2,429

2,431

Public order and safety

1,911

1,898

406

2,317

Enterprise and economic development

625

441

54

679

Science and technology

238

74

57

295

Employment policies

802

483

1

803

Agriculture, fisheries and forestry

631

625

35

666

Transport

1,669

1,373

33

1,702

Environment protection

782

620

43

825

Housing and community amenities

1,279

1,278

0

1,279

Health

7,683

7,664

54

7,737

Recreation, culture and religion

931

829

19

950

Education and training

5,892

5,881

0

5,892

Social protection

15,271

3,809

186

15,457

Total

38,581

25,819

6,181

44,762

Source: Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses 2006, Table 7.17; own calculations.
Notes: 1 Includes Scottish share of identifiable spending outside the UK - 2 Includes spending by Local Authorities and £4m general public service expenditure by Scotland Office.

Estimates of non-identifiable expenditure for Scotland by programme in 2004-05 are shown in Table 3.5. Total non-identifiable expenditure was £6.2 billion, 8.2 per cent of the UK total. The largest components, as for the UK, were "Defence", "Debt interest" and "General public services".

Taking identifiable and non-identifiable expenditure together, total expenditure on services for Scotland in 2004-05 was £44.8 billion (9.6 per cent of the UK amount).

As noted, defence expenditure is the largest item in UK non-identifiable expenditure, accounting for 39.3 per cent of the total in 2004-05. The Scottish contribution to this (£2.4 billion) is based on Scotland's population share. This approach is determined by - and consistent with - the "who benefits" principle, given that defence expenditure is incurred on behalf of the UK population as a whole.

It is worth noting here that the geographic location of defence contractors and employees is a separate issue. Some background discussion can be found in previous reports and the Scottish Economic Report (November 2004).

Accounting Adjustments

Accounting adjustments are necessary to bring expenditure on services into line with Total Managed Expenditure. The largest component of this category is Non-Market Capital Consumption ( NMCC). It is a measure of the amount of fixed capital resources used up in the process of production: in other words, depreciation. The Scottish figure is calculated from Regional Accounts estimates produced by the Office for National Statistics, and from the UK total in PESA 2006. In 2004-05, NMCC in Scotland is estimated at £1.9 billion (15.7 per cent of the UK value).

A timing adjustment reconciles the data in PESA 2006 with the latest Treasury numbers. The Scottish share of this adjustment together with the remainder of expenditure adjustments were allocated according to the share of Total Expenditure on Services ( TES).

In sum, accounting adjustments are estimated at £2.9 billion in 2004-05, or 12.7 per cent of the UK amount.

Table 3.6 Accounting Adjustments

United Kingdom

Scotland

£ million

£ million

Share of UK

Total Accounting Adjustments

22,774

2,900

12.7%

Sources : Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses 2006, Table 7.1, HM Treasury, Scottish Executive.
Note: Includes timing reconciliation and non-market capital consumption.

Aggregate Expenditure

In 2004-05, UK Total Managed Expenditure was £491 billion, or 42.9 per cent of GDP. The measurement of aggregate expenditure for individual regions or countries cannot be carried out with the same precision as that for the UK as a whole.

On the basis of the assumptions and methodology described in this report, aggregate expenditure for Scotland in 2004-05 is estimated at £47.7 billion. As shown, £38.6 billion of this was identifiable expenditure, while non-identifiable expenditure was £6.2 billion, and adjustments were £2.9 billion. Overall, the Scottish share of UK Total Managed Expenditure in 2004-05 is estimated to be 9.7 per cent.

The ratio of estimated Scottish aggregate expenditure to Scottish GDP is 51.0 per cent in 2004-05. This is 8.2 percentage points higher than the equivalent UK ratio. It should be noted that this ratio does not indicate the public sector's contribution to GDP. Only that part of expenditure which is spent on compensation of public sector employees, intermediate consumption and capital replacement would be counted towards Scottish GDP.

As mentioned, some caution is required in comparing the estimates of government expenditure with the corresponding figures published in previous editions of GERS.

Table 3.7 Expenditure in the UK and Scotland, 2004-05

United Kingdom

Scotland

Expenditure,
£ million

Share of aggregate expenditure

Expenditure, £ million

Share of aggregate expenditure

Share of UK expenditure

I. Identifiable 1

392,669

80.0%

38,581

80.9%

9.8%

of which:

Scottish Executive 2

-

-

25,819

54.2%

-

Social protection

161,680

32.9%

15,271

32.0%

9.4%

II. Non-identifiable 3

75,600

15.4%

6,181

13.0%

8.2%

III. Accounting Adjustments 4

22,774

4.6%

2,900

6.1%

12.7%

Aggregate Expenditure

491,044

100.0%

47,662

100.0%

9.7%

Sources: Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses 2006, own calculations.
Notes: 1 Identifiable expenditure on the UK level excludes identifiable spending outside the UK, which is included in non-identifiable expenditure. - 2 Includes Local Authorities and Scotland Office. - 3 Scottish number includes share of identifiable spending outside the UK. - 4 Includes timing reconciliation and non-market capital consumption.

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Page updated: Friday, December 22, 2006