First Minister Nicola Sturgeon calls for financial clarity ahead of COVID recovery summit

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon calls for financial clarity ahead of COVID recovery summit

Ahead of the rescheduled four-nations Covid recovery summit, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon is calling on the UK Government to extend furlough, rule out a return to austerity and prioritise a just recovery from the pandemic, ensuring that pre-existing inequalities are not further exacerbated by the coronavirus crisis.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said: “We have made significant progress on the way out of this pandemic, which has devastated the lives of so many. But we are clearly still in a precarious situation, and it is vital to make sure that we support the people who have been most badly affected by the past 14 months.

“We have done everything we can with the limited powers we have to tackle inequality and mitigate the impact the pandemic has had on peoples’ livelihoods, but we cannot allow that to be eroded as we enter the next phase of living with the virus. A return to the pre-pandemic austerity would be disastrous for jobs, for public services and for people and families across Scotland.

“As the UK Government hold the key financial levers to help us recover from this, I will be calling on it to commit to maintain public spending during the period of recovery, and to extend the furlough scheme for as long as it is needed to protect businesses and people who have been required to stop working to protect others, and I will be emphasising that it is managed sensitively in a way that supports longer term recovery.”



The First Minister added that she had been assured that this will be a meaningful discussion, and urged that it must be. She said that working to recover from Covid cannot be a PR exercise and it must be a collaborative process that properly respects the devolution settlement.

The First Minister continued: “The Scottish Government requires certainty over funding. Without it, people across Scotland who have had to endure so much these past 14 months would lack the reassurance that their jobs are protected, and their public services will continue to be funded to an appropriate level, whatever the virus has in store – that is the bare minimum of our expectations.

“The depth and severity of the health, social and economic impacts of COVID-19 are clear and are being borne unequally. For this summit to be in any way productive all UK nations must work collaboratively.”

She concluded: “As part of that, the UK Government needs to ensure meaningful engagement with the devolved administrations on the negotiation and governance of trade deals, and to respect the devolved Parliaments by not diverting money to be spent by UK Ministers.”

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