Friday, February 7, 2014

Politics



No one should vote for an independent Scotland on the basis of using pound as currency







Scotland would not be able to use the pound as its currency if it voted to break from the United Kingdom later this year, the British minister for Scotland said on Thursday, issuing the government's strongest warning on the subject yet.

As Scots prepare to vote on whether to stay in the UK on September 18, Scottish nationalists are basing their post-independence economic plans on a currency union with Britain.

But the British government, which wants the Scottish public to vote against independence, has already said such a plan would be nearly unworkable.

"Independence means leaving the United Kingdom's monetary union," Secretary of State for Scotland Alistair Carmichael told Britain's parliament.

"The only way for Scotland to be sure of keeping the UK pound as it is now is to stay in the United Kingdom ... No one should vote for an independent Scotland on the basis that they will get to keep the UK pound sterling," he added.

Opinion polls show that around 42 percent of Scots plan to vote against independence and 29 percent in favor.

The British government says Scotland and the rest of Britain are better off together, while Scottish nationalists wants to end what they say are decades of economic mismanagement by London.

Much of the political debate over the referendum has so far focused on finance and currency-sharing arrangements.


Scottish nationalists say they could keep using the pound by ceding control of monetary policy to the B
of England and agreeing broad fiscal guidelines. They believe both sides would benefit from a currency union.



"Scotland is the UK's second largest trading market. It would be absurd for Westminster (the British parliament) to stand in the way of protecting the benefits this brings to businesses and consumers in the rest of the UK," said Stewart Hosie, the Scottish National Party's treasury spokesman.

But Carmichael was one of several lawmakers who spoke in a debate on the future of Scotland to say that any currency-sharing arrangement would be unworkable.
(Source:Reuters)
By Mr M A Amin, A University Student, UK

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