SCOTLAND is set to receive over £150m less than the expected amount for the EU Structural Funds replacement.
Business Minister Ivan McKee has said the UK Government’s Shared Prosperity Fund “fails to deliver promised funding” for Scotland following the UK’s exit from the European Union.
New arrangements published today will see £32m allocated to Scotland for 2022-2023 – £151m short of the £183m estimated to be an appropriate replacement for EU Structural Funds.
In the coming years, the Shared Prosperity Fund will see Scotland allocated £55 million in 2023-24 and £125 million in 2024-25.
By these figures, the third year of funding still delivers less than Scotland received before the UK’s EU Exit.
Since 2016, Ministers claim they have tried to “engage constructively” with the UK Government to ensure the Shared Prosperity Fund aligned with the Scottish Government’s national aims and ambitions.
However, Scottish Ministers say they have been given no role in deciding how funding is allocated and which projects deliver the maximum benefits.
Mr McKee says this undermines the devolution settlement and does not recognise the authority of the Scottish Government in devolved areas.
Speaking today, Mr McKee said: “The UK Government’s Shared Prosperity Fund fails to deliver replacement funding which was promised to Scotland, meaning communities across the country will miss out on around £150 million of investment in 2022-23.
“EU funding has supported infrastructure projects and community initiatives across the country since the 1970s, with Scotland receiving and delivering over £6 billion of EU Structural Funds.
“Transformational projects, such as the University of the Highlands and Islands and the European Marine Energy Centre in Orkney, have brought significant benefits to businesses and communities.
” It is hugely disappointing that future projects with as much potential may lose out.
“Since 2016 the Scottish Government has tried to engage constructively with the UK Government to ensure this Fund was delivered in a meaningful way, consistent with the devolution settlement and aligned with our national economic aims and ambitions.
“However, the UK Government has undermined devolution by failing to give the Scottish Government a decision-making role – which ultimately fails to meet the needs of Scotland’s communities.”
The Scottish Government says it has calculated a sum of £162m per year would be needed to replace the European Regional Development Fund and European Social Fund, increasing to £183m per year when LEADER funding and the EU Territorial Cooperation Programmes are added in.