Sunday, 10 August 2014
Alex Salmond has no tenable plan for currency, says expert | Better Together
Alex Salmond has no tenable plan for currency, says expert | Better Together

"The
only realistic way to avoid the above crises outcomes of Plans A and B is to
combine political union with remaining in the sterling zone. It is only with
political union and the fiscal sharing it allows that the sterling zone is a
credible currency arrangement for Scotland, and it is only by remaining with
the rest of the UK that such an arrangement can work.
only realistic way to avoid the above crises outcomes of Plans A and B is to
combine political union with remaining in the sterling zone. It is only with
political union and the fiscal sharing it allows that the sterling zone is a
credible currency arrangement for Scotland, and it is only by remaining with
the rest of the UK that such an arrangement can work.
By
sticking with his notion that that the sterling monetary union is absolutely
central to the economic well-being of Scotland, Mr Salmond is therefore
actually making the case for voting No in the referendum, because it is only be
staying part of the United Kingdom that the costs to both businesses and
households in terms of their day-to-day payments and transactions are minimized
and job stability, employment and economic growth are secured and maximized."
sticking with his notion that that the sterling monetary union is absolutely
central to the economic well-being of Scotland, Mr Salmond is therefore
actually making the case for voting No in the referendum, because it is only be
staying part of the United Kingdom that the costs to both businesses and
households in terms of their day-to-day payments and transactions are minimized
and job stability, employment and economic growth are secured and maximized."
An ill wind blows as the surge of turbines stirs fears of silent danger to our health, Daily Express
TENS
of thousands of Scots may be suffering from a hidden sickness epidemic caused
by wind farms, campaigners have warned.
The Sunday
Express can reveal that the Scottish Government has recently commissioned a
study into the potential ill effects of turbines at 10 sites across the
country.
More
than 33,500 families live within two miles of these 10 wind farms – which
represent just a fraction of the 2,300 turbines - already built north of the
Border.
Hundreds
of residents are now being asked to report back to Holyrood ministers about the
visual impacts, and effects of noise and shadow flickers from nearby wind
farms.
Campaigners
fear that many people do not realise they are suffering from ailments brought
on by infrasound – noise at such a low frequency that it cannot be heard but
can be felt.
One
such person is Andrew Vivers, an ex-Army captain who has suffered from
headaches, dizziness, tinnitus, raised blood pressure and disturbed sleep since
Ark Hill wind farm was built near his home in Glamis, Angus.
Mr
Vivers, who served almost 10 years in the military, said the authorities had so
far refused to accept the ill effects of infrasound despite it being a “known
military interrogation aid and weapon”.
He
said: “When white noise was disallowed they went on to infrasound. If it is
directed at you, you can feel your brain or your body vibrating. With wind
turbines, you don’t realise that is what’s
happening to you.
“It
is bonkers that infrasound low frequency noise monitoring is not included in
any environmental assessments. It should be mandatory before and after turbine
erection.”
Further
reading:
Scottish independence: FM stands firm on currency, The Scotsman, Updated
ALEX Salmond is standing his ground and
refusing to name a Plan B for Scotland’s currency after independence, despite
mounting criticism of his leadership and unprecedented pressure from his
opponents.
Amid growing unrest among his own supporters
and a slump in the polls, the First Minister is refusing to back down on his
policy, which will be given a final seal of approval by his hand-picked group
of economic advisers next week.
Last night there was no sign of the issue going
away when leaders of the three opposition parties at Holyrood wrote to Salmond
demanding that he sets out a Plan B, arguing that his proposal for a formal
currency union with the rest of the UK is “impossible”.
Labour, the Conservatives and the Liberal
Democrats have said an independent Scotland will not be entitled to insist on a
formal currency union – sharing the pound and the Bank of England with the rest
of the UK.
Salmond’s failure to deal with Alistair
Darling’s criticisms of his currency plans during last week’s STV televised
debate has led to discontent within the Yes movement and support for
independence falling in the polls.
His display has also encouraged the No campaign
to concentrate even more of its efforts on attacking his currency plans,
sensing a fatal flaw.
Further Reading here:
The
Five Tests for a Currency Union
“An
independent Scotland would keep the pound because it’s our currency and it
would be in the interests of the rest of the UK to agree to currency sharing.
But if the rest of the UK won’t agree, an independent Scotland would punish it
by repudiating its pro rata share of UK debt.
For
the avoidance of doubt, Scotland’s Finance Secretary John Swinney told BBC
Radio Scotland last week that failure to agree a currency union would “absolve
the Scots of a £120 billion share of UK debt, which translates into an annual
cost of £5bn a year”.
There
are other things into which this would “translate”, as Angus Armstrong of the
National Institute for Economic and Social Research pointed out last week. If
it is this easy to walk away from debt obligations, secessionist movements in
Europe would jump at the precedent. How might Scotland’s EU application stand
then?
Yes,
it would remove a hefty burden from our shoulders. But an independent country
that began life with debt repudiation would find it could not raise money in
international markets without lenders demanding substantially higher interest
rates. Scotland’s credit rating would be rock bottom.”
The
Fiscal sustainability of an independent Scotland
“Scottish politicians seem as unwilling as
Westminster to tell voters they must pay Scandinavian taxes if they genuinely
want a social democratic future…. Are the people of
Scotland genuinely willing to tax themselves towards social democracy?”
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