On devolution and data, by Alan Trench

9 Aug 10
It has taken the Holtham Commission to provide up-to-date data on the public finances in Wales. The National Assembly needs to emulate Scotland and publish detailed annual figures on public spending and tax revenues

Data is about the most unsexy topic in public policy debates. But it’s also vital; if we don’t have good quality, accurate data about key subjects, we can’t understand how they work, or what the problems are. It’s no accident that much of the work of pioneer social reformers like Seebohm Rowntree was to collect their own accurate, up-to-date data about social conditions.

Public finance, more than any other subject, relies utterly on such data. Perhaps it relies on it too much; many experts can talk in great detail about specific matters, but find the broader picture hard to tell – a classic case of not seeing the wood for the trees. But without data, you can’t have a serious argument at all – you can just opine, with no way of seeing who might be right and who might be wrong.

In Wales the problem has been not such a wood/trees one, as finding that half the forest simply can’t be seen at all. We have pretty good data now on public spending – data that are hugely better than they were in 1999. Because British social statistics are generally pretty good, we know quite a lot about many social problems, at UK level, across Wales and at more local levels.

But we’ve had nothing up to date about the other side of the equation – how much tax revenues are generated in Wales. The Welsh Office published a couple of reports in 1996 and 1997, when the Conservatives were still in office, but there’s been nothing since then (and the quality of public spending statistics has hugely improved since then anyway, so this information is not just out of date but not very reliable either).

Among the signal services that the Holtham Commission has done is to provide more accurate and up-to-date data about Wales’s public finances than we’ve ever had before, and particularly about tax revenues. On the basis of their figure (£17.1bn), I’ve calculated that in 2007-08 Wales’s fiscal deficit was £6.3bn. That’s a terrifying sum: just under a quarter of all public spending in Wales, and over 14% of national income (gross value added) generated in Wales.

But as horrifying as the scale of that deficit is the fact that WE DID NOT KNOW THIS BEFORE. We knew that the state of the Welsh economy was poor, and that tax revenues were a long way from paying for its public services. Some people had produced estimates of the likely size of the fiscal gap, based on what we know about Wales’s national income (gross value added) and the fact that tax revenues generally are a fairly constant proportion of that. But these were surmises, not data. Because no-one chose to collect or publish this data, there was no way to know what the position was. We could only guess.

Contrast the position in Wales with that in Scotland. The Scottish Government publishes every year a publication called Government Expenditures and Revenues Scotland – Gers for short. Gers tells us a huge amount about public finance every year – detailed information about spending (which ties in to the data published by the Treasury in Pesa, the Public Expenditure Statistical Estimates). It estimates tax revenues attributable to Scotland, including a lengthy discussion of how much might be attributable from North Sea oil on three different bases of calculation.

Gers isn’t flawless. It started life as a pretty plainly political exercise when Ian Lang was Secretary of State, intended to answer calls for Scottish self-government by showing how much better off Scotland was in the Union – about the same time the Welsh Office briefly published similar data. (Iain Macwhirter, writing in Public Finance, offered a good discussion of its development, which you can view here.)

Over the years, it has evolved. It now meets the standards of National Statistics, which both is a kite-mark for the quality of the data and ensures that it’s prepared without political interference. Repeated questioning of the methods to use the data both by government statisticians and by outsiders like Jim and Margaret Cuthbert have helped incrementally improve the data.

The spending figures are now pretty clean (one person involved described them to me as being ‘about as good as one could get’). Indeed, the work on them has fed into Pesa, as has work done by Iain McLean and colleagues on the territorial distribution of public spending in England some years ago (executive summary here, full report here). The upshot is that the figures we now have for the territorial distribution of public spending across the UK are hugely better than they were a decade ago. Wales is an indirect beneficiary of that work, of course.

There are greater problems when it comes to the revenue figures. These are estimates, which raise practical and methodological problems. To give an example: the Scottish economy isn’t a microcosm of the UK economy as a whole – it’s different, with more activity in some sectors (oil and gas-related services, for example, and financial services), and less in others.

The Gers data don’t appear to reflect that, but assume that the same sectors are equally strong across the UK, which is almost certainly wrong. And since some sectors generate more corporation tax revenue than others, that will mean the overall estimates of Scottish revenues aren’t right. But to say that data need improving isn’t the same as saying they aren’t useful as they stand.

It’s easy to misinterpret data like Gers. It’s wrongly stated as indicating the economic position of an independent Scotland (as this piece from the Daily Telegraph does), which emphatically it doesn’t do – the data are about how Scotland functions as part of the UK, integrated economically and in public finances, as well as for tax collection purposes.

Gers may not even tell us much about how forms of limited fiscal autonomy might work – that depends on whether the definitions of tax attributable to Scotland (or another part of the UK) for statistical purposes would be the same as the legal ones that might be put in place, given that the legal definitions will certainly shape taxpayers’ behaviour in a way statistical definitions don’t.

But none of this is a reason to avoid starting to prepare such data for Wales. It’s vital if we are to think seriously about how devolution is financed, and too important to be neglected either because it’s too difficult technically or it’s embarrassing politically. The Scottish parallel again is interesting on the practical level; compiling Gers isn’t actually very time consuming, once the data series are set up and given that the Scottish Government has a substantial number of statisticians and economists working for it.

And Scotland is only exceptional because its data are rather rough-and-ready – not because they’re so detailed. Swiss data is remarkably detailed: for every canton, in every year, you can find detailed data about spending, both capital and current, tax revenues, ratios of these, and rankings of the 26 cantons as a result. And the largest Canton in Switzerland (Zürich) has a population less than a third that of Wales. You can find similar data for most other federal systems.

The first thing that’s needed is for the Assembly Government to start to prepare a similar report for Wales – a ‘Government Expenditures and Revenues Wales’. It needs to appear annually, and to cover both public spending by the Assembly and UK governments, and tax revenues generated in Wales. Much of the spending data already exist, but this would collect them clearly into one place and make them more readable and accessible.

The novel part would be information about tax revenues, which we don’t have anywhere at present (except, for 2007-08, in the Holtham report.) And if it wanted to be really useful, it would put that data into a run going back at least three or four years, so we could identify trends. It would also include changes in the amounts allocated as part of the block grant – the consequential changes made to the block grant following changes to spending on comparable functions in England. This information is now available – it’s in a table at the back of the Wales Office annual report – but again it needs to be published as part of a series.

Everyone involved needs to accept that it’s not going to be pretty reading for some years at least, and that work to improve the data will be needed – so an open approach by the Assembly Government to compiling it will pay huge dividends, enabling it to tap into the professional goodwill and expertise that evidently hugely helped the Holtham Commission in its work. And that also means that elected politicians will have to avoid treating it simply as a political football, used to give the government a kicking when that’s convenient. That’s why we’ve been left in such ignorance for so long, and it’s been a disservice to everyone in Wales.

The second thing that’s needed is for the National Assembly to engage with this debate. It needs to insist on more and better data about public finances in Wales, generally. Its role is not limited to examining the detail of health or education policy (important though that is); it was set up to be, as the 1997 white paper called it, ‘A Voice for Wales’. That voice needs to be heard about all matters, and heard clearly. The Assembly needs to insist on seeing this data regularly, and ensure that its quality is satisfactory. It also needs to take an active role for the Assembly in scrutinising Wales’s economy, starting with a careful examination of the new economic renewal strategy unveiled by Deputy First Minister Ieuan Wyn Jones, and the UK government’s plans as well.

And what’s needed then is to start using that data to engage with the UK government and Parliament about what is needed to improve Wales’s economic performance. It’s unlikely that the secretary of state is going to respond to the Holtham Commission’s report and policy recommendations until the Assembly Government has taken a position. The UK government clearly thinks the issue can be postponed until the economy has recovered, when it will set up its ‘Welsh Calman Commission’.

If Wales’s devolved institutions don’t take the lead on this, so that people in Wales can debate what solution they think is right, Wales will probably find itself left behind in the policy debate.

Alan Trench is an academic and non-practising solicitor who blogs at Devolution Matters. This post also appears on Click on Wales, the Institute of Welsh Affairs’ blog

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