Welfare

– in the Scottish Parliament at on 13 August 2014.

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Photo of Elaine Smith Elaine Smith Labour

The next item of business is a debate on motion S4M-10777, in the name of Nicola Sturgeon, on welfare.

Photo of Nicola Sturgeon Nicola Sturgeon Scottish National Party

Debates on welfare always provoke in me, as I am sure they do in many others in the chamber, conflicting emotions. First, I feel a sense of regret that our welfare state, which is so often held up as one of the defining achievements of the union, is being systematically dismantled, causing real and additional hardship to those in society who most need our help. There is now strong evidence that the Tories’ so-called welfare reforms are failing people right across Scotland and that their cuts are having a devastating impact on some of the most vulnerable individuals, families and communities in our society. Indeed, when the Secretary of State for Scotland said, as he did in April, that we are part of “a fantastic system”, he demonstrated just how out of touch he and indeed the other unionist parties are on these vital issues. Regret and a heavy heart are what I inevitably bring to any debate on welfare.

However, standing as we are just five weeks from the referendum, I also feel a real sense of hope. We have before us a precious opportunity to change course and build, not overnight but over time, a social security system that meets our needs—one that supports the needs of our economy by equipping people better for the world of work, one that supports the needs of individuals by ensuring that those who work get a decent wage for the job that they do and one that supports the needs of the vulnerable by ensuring that we have the decent safety net that I believe, and I know many people agree, is one of the hallmarks of a civilised society.

Today’s debate is an opportunity to crystallise the choice that is on offer—the choice between, on the one hand, increasing austerity and division under the present system and, on the other, a different, better, more progressive and more supportive path with independence.

As people consider that choice that will be before them on 18 September, they should do so in the knowledge that further Westminster cuts are still to come—cuts that will impact most on women, children and the disabled. As people consider that choice, I am confident that the policies that we have outlined and the vision that we put forward will encourage them to vote to take these powers into our own hands.

A perfect illustration of that choice, and a topic that we have discussed many times before in the Parliament, is the bedroom tax. Yesterday, the Welfare Reform Committee considered and, I am glad to say, agreed to support the section 63 order to transfer to the Scottish ministers the power over expenditure on discretionary housing payments. That welcome step means that we can now ensure that no person in Scotland need be adversely affected by the bedroom tax. However, it is, is it not, a democratic outrage that a tax that had no political or popular support in Scotland was ever introduced here in the first place?

Make no mistake: all that we are able to do with the bedroom tax is mitigate. We can only take money from other parts of the Scottish budget to mitigate a policy that, had this Parliament had a say, would never have been introduced. A section 63 order will not end the bedroom tax; only by this Parliament having the power to decide will we be able to do what the majority—I believe the vast majority—of people in Scotland want, which is to abolish the bedroom tax.

That is the nub of the debate that we are having today. With the United Kingdom parties now battling to outdo each other on how tough they can be on welfare, it is becoming clear that independence is the only way for us to achieve a system that treats people with dignity and respect. In “Scotland’s Future” we set out a vision and a range of measures that will start to ensure that we have a welfare system that is more suited to Scottish needs. We have said clearly that, if there is a yes vote, we will halt the roll-out of the universal credit and personal independence payments, we will abolish the bedroom tax and we will ensure that welfare payments increase in line with inflation to avoid the poorest families—those in our society with the least—being plunged deeper into poverty. We will increase the carers allowance to recognise the contribution that carers make and to end the situation whereby carers currently get the lowest rate of benefit of everyone who claims benefits.

All those policies will directly and positively impact on people’s financial circumstances and on their quality of life. If there is a no vote, no matter how hard we try—and we will—we will be unable to stop the rise in poverty that Westminster policies will cause.

There is no doubt that the impact is being felt most by the most vulnerable people—in particular, those with health conditions and disabilities. Rather than helping to support individuals, Westminster is ploughing on with flawed systems such as the work capability assessment, which has now been reviewed five times. I warmly welcome the report by the expert working group on welfare, which recommends that the current work capability assessment be scrapped. The Government has committed to doing that when the powers to do so are in our hands.

Just this morning, we have published a research paper that lays bare the impact of the UK Government’s reforms on disabled people. It finds that disabled people in Scotland are likely to experience significant and disproportionate loss of income due to the Westminster cuts. It is expected that, of the 190,000 existing claimants of disability living allowance who will be reassessed for personal independence payments, more than 100,000 will lose some or all of their disability benefits by 2018, with a loss of at least £1,100 each a year. People who get enhanced mobility support could lose up to £3,000 a year. Important though the money is, let us remember that, for people in those circumstances, that loss could take away more than pounds and pence—it could take away their very independence. In my view, making cuts of that magnitude on the backs of disabled and sick people is flatly wrong, and I believe that it is time that we got the powers to do something about it.

Independent research has recently concluded that the cumulative impact of welfare reforms on income is particularly severe for households with disabled children and adults, at about £1,500 per year on average. That impact is more than double the average reduction faced by non-disabled households, although we all know that disabled people are already more likely to be in poverty and face higher costs of living than non-disabled people. It beggars belief that, in modern Scotland, we are prepared to stand by and watch the situation get worse.

Although disabled people are being hit disproportionately, they are not alone in bearing the brunt. We know from children’s charities that up to 100,000 more children will be pushed into poverty by 2020 if we stay on the Westminster path. In March, we published our child poverty strategy, which set out the progress that we are making on childcare, education and youth unemployment. It showed that, since devolution, under the current Administration and the previous one, there has been a real improvement in the rates of child poverty in Scotland, which is to be welcomed. We may disagree about the best way to combat child poverty, but everyone in the Parliament is united in wanting to see it eradicated within a generation. However, the latest figures show that the reduction in poverty that we have seen in recent years is now being reversed. Westminster cuts such as the reduction in in-work tax credits are reducing incomes for some of our poorest households.

As we always should, we will do everything possible in our power to ensure that no child lives in poverty or grows up in poverty. However, the bottom line is this: when policies from Westminster are taking us in the wrong direction, when they are undermining all our efforts and are cancelling out all that this Parliament is able to do, the case for us to take these decisions ourselves becomes overwhelming. By doing that, we can combine what we are already doing on education and support for young people with progressive policies on employment, welfare and benefits. With that approach, we can begin to make inroads into not only mitigating poverty but alleviating it for good. It will take time, effort and determination, but we will have the powers and the access to our vast resources—we are, after all, one of the richest countries in the world—that we need in order to make it possible. That has got to be so much better than standing by, powerless, while Westminster does its damage to the most vulnerable and to the very fabric of our society.

I want to start to draw my remarks to a close today by posing some questions specifically to my colleagues on the Labour benches. Labour’s Tory and Liberal Democrat partners in the no campaign support the welfare policies of the Westminster Government. I profoundly disagree with them, but at least I know where they stand. Today, I am pretty sure that Labour members will claim that they do not support the policies of the current Westminster Government. They will say—I suspect more in hope than in any serious expectation—that the answer to the problem is not independence but a stronger Scottish Parliament and a Labour Government at Westminster. Taking that at face value, I want to give Labour the opportunity to answer a couple of straight questions.

The questions that I would like Jackie Baillie to answer are these. First, short of a yes vote, what new powers is the Parliament guaranteed to get that will allow us to stop the assault on the incomes of the disabled, of women and of children? Secondly, even if there is a Labour Government at Westminster, which Jackie Baillie cannot guarantee, what will that Labour Government do differently on welfare, apart from abolishing the bedroom tax? What, precisely, is Ed Miliband going to do that is different from what David Cameron is already doing? Will Labour halt the roll-out of personal independence payments? Will Labour protect the disabled from the cuts that I have outlined, which they stand to face if personal independence payments go ahead, or is the reality that the disabled will face exactly the same cuts under Labour as they do under the Tories? These are important questions if we are to crystallise the choice that faces people on 18 September.

If Jackie Baillie is about to get up and say that, like me, she opposes these cuts but then argue that getting our hands on the decision-making powers is not the best way to address them, I put it to everyone in the chamber that she needs to be extremely specific about what Labour in Westminster will do instead, and then she needs to tell us what will happen if we end up with another Tory Government after all. I suspect—although I hope that I am wrong—that, at the end of her speech, we will still be waiting for those answers. That will prove that, whether the next UK Government is Labour or Tory, if we vote no, the outlook for the most vulnerable in our society will be exactly the same.

It is clear that, under successive Administrations, the UK Government has failed to deliver the changes that are needed to deliver a welfare system that is fair for all. Not only that, the so-called reforms that are currently under way are likely to make the situation worse. It is only with independence that we can create in Scotland a social security system that is fair and treats people with dignity and respect. It is only this Government and this Parliament that can stand in the way of Westminster implementing further measures that will cause poverty—particularly child poverty—to increase. The only way we can guarantee the powers to stop that happening is to take the power to decide those matters into our own hands, so that the future of our welfare system is decided not by Tory Governments in Westminster but here in this Parliament and we can build a better, fairer and more equal society.

I move,

That the Parliament notes the damaging and destructive impact of the UK Government’s welfare policies on women, children, disabled people and communities across Scotland; further notes that the worst of the cuts are still to come and that all three of the main UK unionist parties are determined to pursue this cuts agenda; recognises that an additional 100,000 children will be pushed into poverty, after housing costs, by 2020 as a result of these policies; also recognises that, by 2018, thousands of disability living allowance (DLA) claimants in Scotland will lose some or all their disability benefits as a result of the replacement of DLA with the personal independence payment; welcomes the fact that the Scottish Government has pledged to halt the roll-out of universal credit and personal independence payments, and recognises that only with the full powers of independence can the UK Government welfare cuts be halted.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

I point out to members that we are tight for time this afternoon.

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

I find that speech astonishing from a party that cannot even tell us what currency benefits will be paid in. I will take absolutely no lessons from Nicola Sturgeon, whose boss encouraged people to vote Liberal at the previous general election—look where that got us.

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

I welcome the opportunity to debate welfare because it was Labour in the post-war austerity years that was bold in its thinking and created the welfare state and the national health service. I am clear—and Nicola Sturgeon is right—that we are witnessing the destruction of that welfare state by the Conservative and Liberal Democrat Government.

There is no doubt in my mind that the consequences of the Tories’ so-called reform of the welfare system are, to be frank, appalling. We do not need to look far to find examples of people being treated inhumanely. Whether it is sanctions driving people to food banks or people waiting months and months for their personal independence payments, the distress is self-evident. It is not just those who are unemployed who need help. There are increasing numbers of people at food banks who are employed but in low-paid jobs. We are facing a cost-of-living crisis the likes of which has not been seen for decades. Wages are flatlining or declining and the price of everyday items is going up—a staggering 25 per cent in the past five years alone—so just getting by is increasingly difficult.

I believe that there is a shared analysis about the extent of the misery caused by Conservative policies for those who are disabled, unemployed or in low-paid jobs and that the majority in the chamber reject what can only be described as an ideologically driven attack on some of the poorest in our society, but the real question is what we do about it.

For the Scottish National Party, the answer is independence. That is its answer to every question, no matter what the question is. When Labour was building the welfare state, the answer was independence; when we were creating the NHS, the answer was independence; and now, as families face a cost-of-living crisis, the answer again is simply independence.

The truth is that people in Scotland are caught between two Governments with the wrong priorities. Obsession with the constitution blinds the Scottish Government and prevents it from taking action now. We can provide people with much-needed help now. We have the power to do so. It is criminal not to use it.

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

No.

We can, of course, vote the Tories out and return a Labour Government in 2015, which is the quickest route to making a difference to people’s lives.

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

No, I think that you should sit and listen.

I welcome the efforts of the expert group on welfare.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

The member is not giving way.

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

To be frank, I expected more detail and a better understanding of costings from the SNP Government. For many years—

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

No.

For many years now, the SNP has argued for the transfer of power over welfare, but the bulk of the expert group’s recommendations will not be considered until after the referendum. As with much else in the SNP’s proposals for independence, there is a lack of clarity, a lack of certainty and considerable risk. People in Scotland deserve better than a cross-your-fingers-and-hope-for-the-best approach to welfare and the future of the country.

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

I will take an intervention in a minute.

In a recent YouGov poll, 79 per cent of Scots said that they wanted their pensions to be the same across the UK, as did 75 per cent of people for welfare. They agreed that pooling and sharing our resources across 63 million people rather than 5 million people makes sense. Like us, they believe in something bigger than independence: they believe in social solidarity across the UK. The want the pensioner in Liverpool to be paid the same as the pensioner in Linlithgow, the disabled person in Dundee to get the same support as the disabled person in Doncaster, and the child who is poor in Gateshead to be cared about just as much as the child who is poor in Glasgow.

I will take an intervention from Nicola Sturgeon if she can tell me why 79 per cent of Scots are wrong.

Photo of Nicola Sturgeon Nicola Sturgeon Scottish National Party

What Jackie Baillie sets out is why people all over the UK should lose the same amount in benefit under the Tories. I have a very—[Interruption.]

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

Order, please. Order.

Photo of Nicola Sturgeon Nicola Sturgeon Scottish National Party

We set out today how the move to personal independence payments will cost 100,000 disabled people more than £1,000 a year. Will Labour halt the roll-out of personal independence payments—yes or no?

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

That clearly was a speech, rather than a question. The cabinet secretary has set herself against the 79 per cent of Scots who believe in something bigger than independence.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

Order, please. Clearly Ms Baillie is not taking an intervention.

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

Let me deal with the carers allowance. It is right that we recognise carers’ contribution to society and provide them with support. The cabinet secretary acknowledges that increasing the carers allowance alone is no substitute for the range of other services that carers use, such as respite. However, it is disappointing that the Scottish Government chose to spin the announcement, saying that 102,000 carers would be better off, costing almost £60 million. The cabinet secretary knows that that is just not true. The Scottish Government failed to explain that any carer who is in receipt of benefit would have carers allowance offset against that. In other words, they would not receive that extra money. The true figure, supplied by the Office for National Statistics, is 57,000. [Interruption.]

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

It is often said that the SNP overclaims and underdelivers, and here is an unfortunate example of it doing just that.

There is very little in the paper that has been costed. I look forward to the cabinet secretary telling me the costings, because without a price tag this is nothing more than a wish list. First, the set-up costs for the IT system are estimated to be £300 million to £400 million. Yesterday the cabinet secretary tried to suggest that we could use the UK system, just like Northern Ireland, forgetting of course that Northern Ireland is going to remain in the UK, while we would be a foreign country—and we might not even have the same currency.

Nicola Sturgeon rose—

In addition, if we used the UK system, it would mean that she could not make the changes that she says she wants to make. [Interruption.]

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

Ms Baillie, can I stop you a moment, please? If members are not taking interventions, other members who are trying to intervene should resume their seats immediately.

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

Secondly, experts suggest that the cost of proposals for carers allowance, the bedroom tax and stopping the roll-out of PIPs would be at least £350 million. That would be £350 million extra on the social security bill each year. There is no detail of how we would pay for that. Instead, we have seen that there would be tax cuts for big business, the cost of which would be borne by the poorest in our society.

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

Other proposals such as universal credit—uncosted. Uprating benefits to meet the cost of living—admirable but uncosted. Replacing DLA and PIP—uncosted. There is the very real prospect of reassessing disabled people as they transition from one benefit to another, causing even more distress—something that the cabinet secretary did not deny when questioned. No costs, no detail—just vague promises about how it will all be better.

It does not take constitutional change; it takes political will.

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

No.

Even where the SNP has control of welfare it has not delivered. The Scottish welfare fund—underspent, at a time when the need is clear. It has taken one year to drag the SNP kicking and screaming into the chamber to mitigate the bedroom tax.

Members: Oh!

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

I am pleased that the cabinet secretary said yesterday that there is nothing to prevent local authorities from backdating to help those in arrears of bedroom tax from last year. That is a welcome U-turn on the SNP’s previous position.

When it comes to tackling poverty, the SNP has a record. It has stripped £1 billion from programmes to tackle poverty. It underspent its budget on fuel poverty, when the number of households in fuel poverty is at 900,000, which is an all-time high.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

The member is in her last minute.

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

It refused to take action on the living wage through procurement when it had a chance to do so. Its actions speak louder than its words.

Experts say that the first post-independence Scottish Parliament will face a £6 billion deficit: £6 billion cut from public spending on such things as schools, hospitals and welfare.

Labour has an ambitious programme. We will increase the minimum wage and we will introduce workplace contracts to guarantee the living wage. [Interruption.]

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

We will tax bankers’ bonuses to fund a job guarantee scheme for those out of work. We will scrap the hated bedroom tax, transform the work capability assessment, tackle the huge backlog of PIP claims and devolve housing benefit and the work programme to Scotland.

What Labour promises, Labour will deliver. What we have been promised by the SNP is vague and uncosted and is likely to amount to hundreds of millions of pounds more than we currently spend, and the SNP has no idea how it is going to be paid for.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

Ms Baillie, I have given you some extra time for all the interruptions but you really must come to a close.

Photo of Jackie Baillie Jackie Baillie Labour

This will be my final sentence, Presiding Officer. The SNP relies on a cross-your-fingers and hope-for-the-best approach. It is inherently dishonest and the people of Scotland deserve much better than that.

I move amendment S4M-10777.4, to leave out from “UK Government’s welfare policies” to end and insert:

“the Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition’s policies on women, children, disabled people and communities across Scotland; notes Scottish Labour’s record in lifting 200,000 children out of poverty, halving pensioner poverty and leading the parliamentary debate in support of those campaigning to fully mitigate the so-called bedroom tax in Scotland; recognises that this was achieved by using the existing powers of the Parliament and that eradicating poverty requires political will rather than constitutional change; believes that the Scottish Government’s plans for welfare in an independent Scotland lack detail and are uncosted; understands that the Institute for Fiscal Studies noted that there will be a £6 billion deficit in the first parliamentary session following independence, leading to a cut in public services such as schools and hospitals, and therefore believes that those who are poorest will be hardest hit and that the best way of helping people out of poverty is with the return of a Labour government in 2015.”

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

Thank you. We have a long afternoon ahead in this debate. I remind members that, if the member speaking is not taking their intervention, they must be respectful and resume their seats. I also remind members that comments from sedentary positions are not acceptable.

Photo of Alex Johnstone Alex Johnstone Conservative

It comes as no surprise that the timing of this debate is just five weeks before a referendum and that it coincides with the publication of a report that allows the Scottish Government to make further claims about its position on welfare.

However, the problem that drives us today is the fact that the Government does not realise the role that welfare plays in achieving our economic recovery. The Westminster Government has made it clear that welfare has a role in economic recovery, and it is no coincidence that in this country—the UK as a whole—the proportion of workless households is the lowest ever recorded, the number and proportion of children in those households is at a record low, the number of children in households in which no one has ever worked is at its lowest level for 15 years, and the inactivity rate of 21.7 per cent has never been lower, reflecting the falling number of people who are claiming inactivity benefits. Employment is up in every UK region. Since the election, three quarters of those who are in employment are working full time. In the 16 to 24 age group, the number of those who are not in employment, education or training is at its lowest level for more than eight years.

Often when we talk about those numbers, the Government in Scotland likes to claim responsibility for them, but it cannot claim that responsibility if it pursues a negative policy in relation to our welfare reforms. The key welfare reform that was raised in the press release that came out this morning is the change in disability benefits. In that press release, the Government makes it clear that

“More than 100,000 Scots are expected to lose some, or all, of their UK disability benefits by 2018, with individuals set to lose at least £1,120 per year”.

We have to look slightly more closely at those figures. If 100,000 of the 190,000 Scots who are in receipt of disability benefit are likely to lose out, it is reasonable to expect that personal independent payments will benefit the 90,000 Scots who are most severely disabled. That is the key change that moving from DLA to PIP is designed to satisfy. It is a desire to ensure that those who are in greatest need benefit from the resource that is available.

The figure of 100,000 who will see their support reduced includes a significant proportion who, as a part of the change, will move from disability payments to universal credit. Of course, the Scottish Government does not account for that reduction in the total budget so it, consequently, skews the figures.

The impression is being given that the amount of money that is being paid in disability benefits is somehow reducing. However, the figures that are available through the Department for Work and Pensions—I am sure that someone will be willing to dispute them—appear to tell a different story. The real-terms budget for the current financial year is a record high. The money that is being paid in DLA will begin to tail off as we reach the end of this decade and PIP begins to kick in. In fact, it is not until the later years of this decade that the amount of money that is being paid in disability allowances and benefits will begin to fall below the record high that we will see in the current year.

However, at the same time, the take-up of universal credit will plug that gap and ensure that nobody loses out. The key issue is that we ensure that, as we move forward into economic recovery, we provide opportunities for the many people who wish to work but have not had the opportunity to get back in to the workforce. Unless we can deliver a viable healthy workforce in this country, we will not benefit from the on-going recovery.

I turn finally to the discussion that took place yesterday at the Welfare Reform Committee, which has already been mentioned by Jackie Baillie. It was during that discussion that Jackie Baillie, Michael McMahon and I raised the issue of funding and the question of how the Scottish Government intends to fund the promises that it has made.

Under questioning, it became relatively clear that the promises that are being made are, by and large, empty and unfunded. It would appear that the mention of the £6 billion that the cabinet secretary likes to talk about as money that is being removed from the overall budget is not to be misinterpreted—[Interruption.]

Photo of Alex Johnstone Alex Johnstone Conservative

It is not to be misinterpreted as a promise to reinstate that money. There appears to be no financial commitment in the first years of an independent Scotland to returning any of that resource to the people from whom the cabinet secretary claims it has been taken.

Photo of Alex Johnstone Alex Johnstone Conservative

I will finish by asking a question of the cabinet secretary, which she can answer at some point later in the debate if the opportunity arises.

Will the cabinet secretary be honest with the people of Scotland and tell us, prior to 18 September, what she intends to spend additionally within the budget for welfare in an independent Scotland? Will she tell us how it will be spent and what will be spent, or will she come clean and tell us that she intends to spend not a penny more?

I move amendment S4M-10777.2, to leave out from first “notes” to end and insert:

“supports the UK Government’s welfare reform, which seeks to simplify the welfare system, make it more accessible and make work pay; notes that welfare budgets continue to rise in response to need; supports the UK Government’s commitment to provide better standards of living for people on lower incomes by taking 242,000 Scots out of income tax altogether, and calls on the Scottish Government to provide a detailed cost and funding analysis of its own welfare proposals before the referendum in September.”

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

We come to the open debate. If we have to pause for disruptions this afternoon, the time will come out of members’ speeches.

Photo of Kevin Stewart Kevin Stewart Scottish National Party

We have already heard this afternoon that the Secretary of State for Scotland, Alistair Carmichael, thinks that we have a fantastic welfare system. I would like to hear Mr Carmichael say that to some of my many constituents who are suffering because of the horrendous welfare reforms that have come from the Tory-Liberal Government in London and have been backed to the hilt by the Labour Party.

Jackie Baillie said earlier that our answer to everything was independence, which it is not. Her answer to everything seems to be, “Stick with the Tories.” That is the Labour answer, and it is certainly not what I want for Scotland.

Let us look at some of the impacts of the welfare reforms. Since 2009, there has been a staggering increase in jobseekers allowance sanctions. A written answer I received showed that in that period there has been a 65 per cent increase in the number of disabled people who have been sanctioned; a 76 per cent increase in the number of women who have been sanctioned; and a staggering 563 per cent increase in the number of lone parents who have been sanctioned. It is absolutely clear that the current UK sanctions regime is neither ethical nor proportionate, and that it has the potential to leave already vulnerable people at risk of poverty.

We can see the increase in poverty through the rise in the use of food banks in Scotland. There has been a 400 per cent rise in their use in the past year, and a 1,103 per cent rise, according to the Trussell Trust, in the use of food banks by children. That is completely and utterly unacceptable, and that is not the kind of society that I want to live in.

It seems, however, that members of the better together campaign feel that food bank usage is absolutely fine. A report in today’s Press and Journal states that a post on better together Aberdeenshire’s Facebook page claimed that the rise in food bank demand was

“Scotland becoming a normal European country.”

I do not know who wrote that but, quite frankly, they are off their head.

I want to live in a normal country—a normal independent country where we do not have to rely on food banks. I do not want to live in a country where families and children, including families who are in work, have to queue to get food parcels, although better together activists may want to live in such a country.

Photo of Kevin Stewart Kevin Stewart Scottish National Party

No, I will not, because the member’s side will not give way.

I turn to remarks that other groups have made about the welfare reforms. The report “Welfare Reform in Scotland: The impact on people living with HIV and viral hepatitis”, by HIV Scotland and Hepatitis Scotland, states:

“The reforms are causing significant uncertainty and anxiety, worsening the mental and physical health of people in grave need”.

As I have gone round various groups in recent times, I have seen not just uncertainty and anxiety but fear—absolute fear about what is going to happen.

The Multiple Sclerosis Society recently held an open day in Aberdeen at which MSPs were invited to discuss with sufferers their fears about the reforms that are about to hit. Those sufferers have a great worry about PIP. Ms Baillie confirmed today that Labour will keep PIP. Those folks have a great fear that they will lose their independence or that their carers will be forced to leave work in order to care for them.

The vast bulk of the folks to whom I have spoken want to remain in work for as long as possible, and often their DLA payments allow them to stay in work. DLA payments also provide additional care so that their loved ones can continue to work. This great welfare reform policy, which was supposed to ensure that folk who can work will get work, is blown completely out of the water because of those scenarios that will inevitably happen. The fear is immense. I want to live in a country where we replace fear with hope and create a system that works for all.

Photo of Kenneth Macintosh Kenneth Macintosh Labour

Too much of my casework in the past couple of years has been about welfare and, in particular, the impact of the welfare reforms. We are all aware that times have been tough and, just when families and individuals have needed to fall back on our welfare safety net, they find it withdrawn. People with disabilities have been filled with anxiety, even at the prospect of being reassessed. Families, whether because of sanctions or a combination of reasons, have found themselves with no cash, no food and no fuel.

Even beyond the immediate benefits system, the most vulnerable have been affected by decisions that have been taken at all levels of government and which directly affect their welfare. Students with additional needs find their college courses withdrawn and people the length and breadth of our country are suffering from a lack of affordable housing. Therefore, as much as I am pleased to be discussing welfare yet again in Parliament, the motion sums up much of my frustration with the independence debate and the Scottish Government over the past three years. Labour and the SNP should be united on welfare and should work together to oppose a Tory agenda that we both resist. We should be standing up for the vulnerable and trying to lift people out of poverty rather than blaming them for their misfortune. We should be defending or even rebuilding a system that is based on dignity and respect—to use the words of the expert working group on welfare—rather than on punishment and shame.

Photo of Dave Thompson Dave Thompson Scottish National Party

The member mentioned that Labour and the SNP should be united on welfare issues against the Tories. Does he accept that, as would be the case in an independent Scotland, the majority in the Parliament is united against the welfare cuts and all the other things that are coming from the Tories? Between us—the SNP and Labour—we would create a far better and fairer welfare system in an independent Scotland.

Photo of Kenneth Macintosh Kenneth Macintosh Labour

I recognise the argument that Mr Thompson uses, but I believe that there are two answers. We in the Parliament should unite to use the Parliament’s powers to make a difference and protect the people of Scotland, but the argument is also fundamentally one for getting rid of the Tory Government at Westminster and not for breaking up the whole country.

Photo of Nicola Sturgeon Nicola Sturgeon Scottish National Party

I appreciate the positive tone that Ken Macintosh is striking and I agree with much of what he has said, but I am unclear about what the Labour Party says that it would do differently from the Tories on universal credit, personal independence payments and other changes that are causing so much hardship. Perhaps Ken Macintosh could advise me about that.

Photo of Kenneth Macintosh Kenneth Macintosh Labour

It is interesting that the SNP has modelled most of its policies on Labour policies; it has tried to copy Labour policies. There is not much difference between what the SNP presents as the position in an independent Scotland and what we would do in the UK; the question is simply about whether that is done in an independent Scotland or in the UK. I genuinely do not think that there is much difference.

We share broadly similar approaches, but the difficulty is that independence gets in the way. For the Scottish Government and its supporters, independence is portrayed as the answer to welfare, just as it is the answer to nuclear disarmament and unemployment, as Jackie Baillie said. The rest of us see that as a simplistic and misleading distraction.

On the positive side, we have to endure this for only another five weeks. I am optimistic that Scotland will emerge from a resounding no vote and unite around a shared vision for a progressive future. That is the language that has dominated the referendum debate and it is one of the few positives that we can salvage from the national discussion.

Why is independence not the answer? I will give a few examples and begin with food banks. The First Minister will face a question from my colleague Jackie Baillie tomorrow on whether there will be food banks in an independent Scotland. I will be intrigued to hear his response.

The evidence that was presented to the Welfare Reform Committee was clear about the reasons for the growth in demand for such a basic item as food. The rise in food, energy and housing costs is part of the story, but the introduction of various welfare reforms, including the increased use of sanctions, is another reason. Labour and SNP members of that committee are united in our frustration that UK ministers seem to be deliberately in denial about that link, but it is difficult to see how the SNP offer on welfare in an independent Scotland differs from what Labour proposes. According to the evidence that we heard yesterday from the Deputy First Minister, the SNP wants to end sanctions but maintain conditionality, for example.

There is an interesting contrast between the Deputy First Minister’s relatively sober evidence at the Welfare Reform Committee’s meeting yesterday and the entirely uncosted but stridently assertive motion in her name today. Yesterday, she painted a picture of a reformed welfare system, which she said would involve no net increased costs, but today we are back with the language of, “We will stop the cuts,” although there is no detail on how that would be paid for. It is ironic, if not amusing, that she asks for answers to questions that she will not answer herself.

Welfare is inherently complex. I will expand on why independence is not the answer. It is worth reminding ourselves that, although much of our discussion has focused on out-of-work benefits, most welfare spending goes on older people. That includes disability and housing support, but the largest single cost is the state pension. In his infamous leaked Cabinet paper, John Swinney noted the worries that exist about the affordability of pensions in an independent Scotland.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

You need to draw to a close.

Photo of Kenneth Macintosh Kenneth Macintosh Labour

I will do so.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies has noted that the average age of the Scottish population will increase more rapidly than that of the UK, and the ONS projects that Scotland will have a higher and increasing dependency ratio in relation to those of pension age.

Most Scots recognise that we are better off working together with the rest of the UK, pooling and sharing our resources and using the Parliament’s powers to make a difference, rather than using welfare simply to nurse a grievance with Westminster.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

I am sorry to have to advise members that I cannot give time back if they take interventions.

Photo of John Mason John Mason Scottish National Party

If there is one area that I would like this Parliament to have responsibility for, it is welfare, for two main reasons. First, it makes absolute sense. We are responsible for education, preparing young people and others for the workplace. We are responsible for healthcare, when people cannot work. We are responsible for getting more and better housing. We are responsible for trying to secure more and better jobs. The missing ingredient in the package is welfare and benefits, on which we should be able to decide.

We need a system that helps and encourages folk to work if they are able to do so, but there are many faults with the current system. We have heard a lot about that this afternoon and I am sure that we will hear more. In particular, people are not financially better off when they get into work, and they still need benefits on top of their earnings so that they can manage to live, and the current cuts are hitting women, disabled folk and younger people in particular.

My second main reason for wanting this Parliament to have responsibility for welfare is because it has shown an appetite across the parties, particularly Labour and the SNP, for dealing with welfare. We set up the Welfare Reform Committee, although we have not set up committees to consider many other reserved matters. When Labour asked for measures to deal with the bedroom tax, it was pushing at an open door, because many of us, including cabinet secretary John Swinney, detest the bedroom tax. The main challenge was how to tackle the tax while remaining within the rules.

We have had a number of briefings for the debate, including from the Child Poverty Action Group in Scotland. According to CPAG, recent reforms that are having the most impact on children are: real-terms cuts; reduced entitlement to tax credits; reduced value of child benefit; and sanctions and benefit delays. The first three reforms have eroded and reduced benefits, but sanctions leave people with absolutely no income. That is what I find so awful about sanctions and benefit delays. All income can be stopped, for the slightest of reasons. How is anyone meant to cope with that?

We will not be able to vote on the amendment that Alison Johnstone lodged, which called for a “citizen’s income”. I realise that a citizen’s income is not without challenges, but surely we could at least agree that it is a direction in which we would all like to move. Whatever their situation, everyone would be entitled to a roof over their head, food and heat.

Photo of Kenneth Macintosh Kenneth Macintosh Labour

I put this to the Deputy First Minister yesterday. The SNP’s expert working group on welfare and constitutional reform said that we should end sanctions but called for a system based on “positive conditionality”. The Deputy First Minister recognised that that is sanctions by another name. Does the member recognise that description?

Photo of John Mason John Mason Scottish National Party

A key point that the Deputy First Minister made was that we cannot change the system overnight, but that it is about the direction that we are taking. What I want to stress is that Labour and the SNP want to move in the same direction, towards a good, strong welfare system—our approach to the bedroom tax is an example. As part of that, I like the suggestion that there should be a certain level of unconditionality, whereby people are entitled to a certain income, no matter what. That is what we do for prisoners—I presume that that is what everyone should be entitled to.

I am running out of time, but I want to mention food banks. On Monday I met one of the local co-ordinators for the north and east of Glasgow. She and I are both convinced that more people need to use food banks than are currently accessing them. A lot of people are reluctant even to go to a food bank and ask about getting help. When they do so, they find that they must have a voucher. The DWP does not give out vouchers, citizens advice bureaux do not give out vouchers, and many general practitioners do not give out vouchers. It is not easy to get food from a food bank. The Trussell Trust has a strict system for how often people can access food parcels, and—frankly—someone who has been sanctioned for 13 weeks cannot do so often enough.

The idea that food bank use is greater than the actual need strikes me as totally unbelievable. I am convinced that, in my area at least, the need is greater than the current level of use.

The Equal Opportunities Committee has been looking at a range of issues, and the Parliament received good briefings for today’s debate. I cannot go into them in detail but I will mention them in passing.

On gender, the Engender briefing talks about how women are being affected by the cuts so much more than men: £5.8 billion of the changes are hitting women, whereas the figure for men is only £2.2 billion.

On disability, Inclusion Scotland has briefed the committee that the programme of welfare reform is having a devastating and disproportionate impact on disabled people in Scotland.

The Equal Opportunities Committee will take evidence on young homeless people tomorrow. Action for Children has stated:

“Some young people also face sanctions on their housing benefit when they access certain training courses.”

My question for the anti-independence parties, especially Labour, is: will they support responsibility for welfare policy coming to Holyrood whatever the vote in September, and if not, why not?

The sad fact is that a no vote is very unlikely to produce more devolution. That is what I find so disappointing about Labour’s position in the chamber, although it is clear that Labour members outside the Parliament, such as Bob Holman in the east end of Glasgow, are strongly supporting independence. Why is the Labour Party putting the constitution ahead of the real needs of constituents? Why is the Labour Party so focused on the constitution and refusing change? Why will the Labour Party not just choose what is best for needy people? Surely Labour accepts that it and the SNP at Holyrood would together produce better welfare solutions than would Labour and the Conservatives at Westminster?

Even if we give the Labour amendment the benefit of the doubt and assume that the party will win the 2015 UK election, the Tories are likely to be back in 2020 and they would undo anything positive that Labour had done. Labour has a choice: does it want Labour and the SNP working together on welfare, or does it want to alternate with the Tories at Westminster?

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

I am afraid that I will have to keep members strictly to six-minute speeches.

Photo of Liam McArthur Liam McArthur Liberal Democrat

I welcome this, the latest debate on welfare, which is an issue of fundamental importance to people right across the country.

I declare a personal interest as someone whose brother has been a long-term recipient of disability living allowance. I therefore assure members at the outset that I need no persuading about the anxieties felt by those who are directly affected by the changes and the associated uncertainty. It is partly for that reason that I believe that we must be absolutely clear about what we are proposing to do and, equally important, why. It is also why I think that we need to continue to listen carefully and be prepared to argue for change where evidence shows that things are not working.

I do not doubt that the process of welfare reform has been difficult and unsettling, but the UK Government can legitimately claim to have been clear about the objectives of reform and to have shown a willingness to listen and to adapt where necessary, including in relation to the needs of cancer sufferers and those living in residential care and in the application of the spare room levy. That approach will need to continue, but the UK Government does not seek to shy away from the need for radical reform—and that need for reform is something that is accepted by most independent experts and all political parties, including, it would seem, the SNP. Little wonder, given the reality that the system too often provides the wrong incentives. For too many people, it acts as a real obstacle to work. Over the period when our economy experienced almost uninterrupted growth, the welfare budget increased in real terms by around 40 per cent. That does not make sense, and it is not sustainable.

Of course, the debate is not really about welfare. As ever, as the Cabinet Secretary for Infrastructure, Investment and Cities admitted, it is all about the referendum and the belief that all would miraculously be better with independence. For the reasons that I set out at the start of my speech, and in the interests of those who are worried, I may be tempted to take the SNP’s promises at face value, but those assertions need to be rigorously tested, which is what Jackie Baillie, Alex Johnstone and Ken Macintosh did.

Let us start with the case for reform. The cabinet secretary denounces everyone else for supporting reform, but it is an agenda that she and her colleagues appear to accept—why else set up the expert working group? The challenge facing the group was not insignificant. Its members were presumably tasked with coming forward with proposals that would honour Ms Sturgeon’s commitment to a welfare system that was “fairer and simpler”, that would “make work pay”, that was “innovative”, that included “appropriate targeting” and that did not involve cuts, but which would not have the £2.5 billion needed to honour the promises made by SNP ministers in opposing almost every change put forward by the UK Government.

How did the group do? In truth, it did as well as could be expected. However, after months of listening to SNP ministers and back benchers rail against the work programme, sanctions and even universal credit, we find that their experts are recommending—to the surprise of no one—a work programme, sanctions and the principle of universal credit.

Simply changing the name of those UK policies to pretend that somehow what one is proposing is radically different is disingenuous and will leave many more people across Scotland wondering what the point of independence is.

As for the criticism of welfare caps and the threat of more cuts to come, the SNP’s case is little more convincing. The First Minister himself has said that

“the right cap deployed in the right way ... is a reasonable thing to have”.

As far as Mr Salmond is concerned, the cap appears to fit.

Meanwhile, the SNP’s own fiscal commission has said that the Scottish Government will have to match the trajectory on debt reduction, and Mr Swinney agrees. It is little wonder, then, that the white paper makes no mention of any commitment to increase spending by the £2.5 billion that would be needed to make good on the promises that the SNP regularly makes to reverse the cuts, which—let us be clear—are represented in Scotland by a welfare budget that is, for the time being, going up. By all accounts, the cabinet secretary could not shed any more light on that at yesterday’s meeting of the Welfare Reform Committee.

There does not even seem to be space in the white paper to explain how the SNP would pay for another of its top priorities—one that is backed by a motion of this Parliament—to increase child benefit for those who earn more than £60,000 a year. Therefore, the SNP’s claims on welfare do not stack up.

Meanwhile, we have the ridiculous claim that only a yes vote next month will save the NHS. What arrant nonsense. Since 2010, NHS funding in England has gone up by £12.7 billion. The cash equivalent for Scotland is protected and can be spent by the Scottish Government in any way it sees fit. In addition, the founding principles of treatment being free at the point of delivery and based on clinical need are unique and enduring.

By contrast, as the IFS and the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland have both pointed out, the costs of independence would lead to tax hikes and/or spending cuts, which would inevitably affect the NHS in Scotland, as John Swinney agreed in his infamous briefing to Cabinet. It is no wonder that today’s British Medical Journal poll suggests that 60 per cent of doctors believe that we get the best of both worlds as part of the UK.

On welfare, after three years of debates and much sound and fury, we know what the SNP does not like but, as Ken Macintosh rightly observed, what is not clear is how any of that would change in the event of Scotland leaving the UK or how any changes would be paid for—or, indeed, in what currency. Simply rebranding key elements of what has been introduced by the UK Government while promising to reverse other changes but failing to say how much that would cost or how it would be paid for will not wash.

We need to create a welfare system that is simple to understand, that lifts people out of poverty and that makes work pay while at the same time providing an effective safety net for those who need it. However, as I have said previously, claiming to be in favour of reform while holding the view that any cuts to any benefits or any tightening of any of the demands that are placed on recipients is automatically unfair just is not credible.

No party in the Parliament, including the SNP, has a monopoly on caring, but the SNP scaremongering about the NHS or further welfare cuts while making promises that it knows it cannot keep will not provide a more secure future for the people who need support.

Photo of Annabelle Ewing Annabelle Ewing Scottish National Party

As a member of the Parliament’s Welfare Reform Committee, I am pleased to speak in this important and revealing debate on welfare, for it affords me the opportunity to ensure that no one is in any doubt about the impact of the Westminster Government’s current welfare cuts and of those that are coming down the line, regardless of whether it is Tory Labour or Labour Tory. The silence of the Labour Party today speaks volumes. It will do nothing differently from the Tories, except on the bedroom tax. Shame on Labour.

What we are seeing before our very eyes is the dismantling of the welfare system and the removal of the safety net that should be embodied in it. What kind of rotten, miserable society is being created by a Westminster system that harasses recently bereaved widows to leave their home of many decades or pay a tax simply because there is a spare room; that says to those with motor neurone disease that, to avoid the bedroom tax, they should take in a lodger; that encourages the description of people with long-term conditions who are unable to work as workshy; and which forces decent, hard-working civil servants to make judgments of Solomon about their fellow citizens in accordance with Kafkaesque criteria that are designed to lock those citizens out of the little help to which they are entitled?

As the motion states, the “damaging and destructive impact” of those Westminster policies is being felt by communities and families the length and breadth of Scotland. In the time available, I want to focus in particular on the impact on the disabled and children—two of the most vulnerable groups in our society.

As we have heard, today the Scottish Government published a comprehensive report on the financial impacts of welfare reform on disabled people in Scotland. It makes shocking reading. It is clear from the report that more than 100,000 people in Scotland will lose disability benefits. As the Deputy First Minister has pointed out, that will not only mean a loss of financial support but have a devastating impact on the quality of life of disabled people and their families.

In paragraph 2.1 of its helpful briefing for today’s debate, Inclusion Scotland says:

“It is clear that the prime motivation behind the replacement of Disability Living Allowance ... by the Personal Independence Payment ... has not been empowering disabled people to the same freedom, choice, dignity and control as other citizens to participate in society and live an ordinary life. Rather it has been about cutting the welfare budget.”

There we have it in a nutshell: Westminster’s treatment of disabled people in 21st century Scotland is to be determined solely by Treasury bean counters.

The Tories are so interested in the possible ramifications for disabled people that they seem to be having a little chat and telling jokes to one another. This is an important debate, and I am sure that people across Scotland will have noted the Tories’ lack of interest in the interests of disabled people. We should recall that, when the Welfare Reform Act 2012 was going through the legislative process, the Tory-Liberal Democrat Government—oh, I see that the Liberal Democrat member has gone as well—made it very clear—

Photo of Annabelle Ewing Annabelle Ewing Scottish National Party

I am sorry, but no. Ms Baillie set the tone for taking interventions in the debate.

The Tory-Liberal Government made it very clear that it was seeking to achieve a 20 per cent cut across the board.

However, another way and another future—a decent, dignified future—are possible for our disabled citizens. A yes vote on 18 September will enable Scotland to halt the abolition of DLA and the cuts, and, over time, to put in place a new welfare system for Scotland that is fit for purpose and progressive, which provides a safety net through which individuals cannot fall, which will not see more than 100,000 children pushed into poverty by 2020 and which will not think it somehow acceptable that in the past year alone 22,387 children have had to rely on food banks to be able to eat.

In that respect, I want to mention again the very curious statement, highlighted by my colleague Kevin Stewart, that was made by the official better together outfit up in Aberdeenshire. Those people seem to think that in 21st century Scotland increased recourse to food banks is not only acceptable but laudable. How can they stoop so low? What a miserable lot they are. Do they have no respect for basic human dignity? Scotland is a wealthy country; it is wealthier per head than France, Japan and indeed the UK as a whole. The independent chair of the expert working group on welfare and constitutional reform, Martyn Evans, said at the Welfare Reform Committee’s evidence-taking session on 24 June 2014:

“The evidence was quite wide ranging. Our expenditure on social protection overall as a percentage of gross domestic product is lower than the level of expenditure in the UK and lower than that in a significant number of other OECD countries.

The taxes that are raised in Scotland pay for our system already”.—[Official Report, Welfare Reform Committee, 24 June 2014; c 1565.]

There we have it.

This afternoon we have heard proof that, as far as Westminster is concerned, whether it is Labour Tory or Tory Labour, it will make no difference to our society’s most vulnerable members. Labour has made it quite clear by its silence—and I see Labour members smirking away—

Photo of John Scott John Scott Conservative

You should be drawing to a close.

Photo of Annabelle Ewing Annabelle Ewing Scottish National Party

They have made it quite clear by their silence that they have no intention of doing anything very much different from the Tories.

It is time to take welfare decisions into our own hands and to control our own resources. It is time to take this one opportunity to use our vast resources to build a fairer country.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

You must close, please.

Photo of Alex Rowley Alex Rowley Labour

I had read the briefings for the debate before I came into the chamber, and then I got hold of the Business Bulletin and read Nicola Sturgeon’s motion. I have to say that it is not about trying to build unity over a way forward on welfare in Scotland; it is simply an attempt to win some yes votes as we move towards the referendum. I see that Nicola Sturgeon has rejoined us. I have to tell her that her policy seems to be: “Where there is harmony, we will create discord and division and try to win votes as a result.”

When I think of the welfare state, I tend to think of the Liberal, William Beveridge.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

There are too many private conversations. Can we hear Mr Rowley, please?

Photo of Alex Rowley Alex Rowley Labour

I tend to think of William Beveridge’s paper to tackle want, idleness, ignorance, disease and squalor, which he called the five “giant evils”. I say to Liam McArthur that I am sure that William Beveridge would turn in his grave if he saw how the reforms are impacting on people in Scotland and across the UK.

I recently visited the Benarty food bank, which is part of the Dunfermline food bank. I noted that, out of the 2,373 vouchers that had been issued from April 2010 to July 2014, the largest number had been issued because of benefit changes and benefit delays—the numbers were 613 and 710 respectively. The Trussell Trust does not count sanctions, as such. Vouchers were also issued because of refused crisis loans. Those are major factors in driving people into absolute poverty. The basic right and need that everyone in this country has to be able to feed themselves is being denied them.

The Tories and the Liberals need to come out of denial. We have food banks and major problems in our communities. We need to examine why that is the case, to stop being in denial that the problem exists, and to start to look at how we can mitigate those issues. It is unacceptable for the whole of Scotland and, indeed, the whole UK that people have to rely on charity in order to feed themselves.

When I think about the welfare state, I also think about Clement Attlee and his Government of 1945, which brought about the creation of the welfare state. I think of the great Welshman and political hero Nye Bevan, who brought about the creation of the national health service, which is one of the greatest social creations of the 20th century and into this century. They recognised that, by pooling and sharing the resources of 60-odd million people across the United Kingdom, we could build a welfare state and a health service that would be the envy of the world.

That is why the answer to our current issues is not narrow nationalism that wants to create disharmony and to pit people against one another. It is about continuing to work to share resources across the United Kingdom so that people in any part of it will work together when people in any part of it are in difficulties.

We have to be tough on poverty and on the causes of poverty. On being tough on poverty, the Oxfam briefing that was sent out earlier highlights that

“Clydebank Independent Resource Centre supported clients to claim over £3.5 million in the 2013/14 financial year.”

Those moneys were not being claimed. My criticism of the Scottish Government is that it is not working with local authorities and organisations across Scotland so that we can be tough on poverty.

I saw Nicola Sturgeon on television the other night and thought that she was announcing a new £0.5 million for food banks. The following day, I discovered that it was the same £0.5 million that had been announced previously; she just said how the money was to be spent. I think that £10,000 of that money is going to Fife. We need to work with the local authorities and at local level to ensure that we maximise how we are tough on poverty.

On policies, I say again that over the past seven years the SNP Government has a terrible record on trying to tackle inequality. I will pitch against that record the records of Labour Governments in the UK or in Scotland any time and in any place. In Scotland, 200,000 children were lifted out of poverty and pensioner poverty was halved. Those are achievements under a Labour Government. The SNP’s record on tackling inequality shows that it certainly has nothing to be proud of.

The SNP has even less to be proud of in being tough on the causes of poverty. If we look at the cuts in colleges, we need to look at full employment. I have said time and again that the history of the labour movement shows that the people who were involved in, for example, the Jarrow march and the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders work-in did not do it for benefits but for jobs. Our objective should be full employment, giving people opportunities—

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

You must close, please.

Photo of Alex Rowley Alex Rowley Labour

—being more ambitious for young people’s lifelong benefit by getting them the training, skills and jobs so that they can have a prosperous future. Again, the SNP—

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

Mr Rowley—you must close, please.

Photo of Alex Rowley Alex Rowley Labour

—has failed drastically.

Photo of Jamie Hepburn Jamie Hepburn Scottish National Party

I say to Alex Rowley that I am very proud of this Scottish Government’s efforts to tackle and mitigate the effects of the bedroom tax by funnelling additional moneys into the Scottish welfare fund to make up for the shortfall that was handed down by the UK Government in terms of council tax benefit. That is happening here and now, and we can be proud of it.

I thank the Scottish Government for bringing today’s debate. It is important to go back to first principles. Inherent in the Labour amendment and Jackie Baillie’s contribution is the idea that Scotland is somehow a basket case and cannot afford to provide a decent and fair social security system. Jackie Baillie’s speech today was matched by her line of questioning at yesterday’s Welfare Reform Committee meeting: no welcome for the Scottish Government’s commitment to abolishing the bedroom tax; no welcome for its commitment to bringing carers allowance up to the same level as jobseekers allowance or for the Deputy First Minister’s commitment to doing more for carers beyond that; and no welcome for the commitment to replacing the work capability assessment with a fairer system.

The affordability of our social security system is undeniably important, but so are ambition, vision and the determination to do better. I did not get that sense of drive from Ms Baillie’s speech today. We know that

“In 2012-13, 42.3% of Scottish tax revenues were spent on welfare and pensions (social protection), compared with 43% for the UK as a whole.” and we know that

“Spending on social protection as a share of gross domestic output ... has been lower in Scotland than in the UK in each of the past five years.”

So, we know that Scotland can afford a better system—which point was made by the independent expert group on welfare.

I turn to the report that the Scottish Government published today on the impact of welfare reform on disabled people. I think that the findings of the report tally largely with the report that Sheffield Hallam University prepared for the Welfare Reform Committee. The Scottish Government’s report states:

“Of the 190,000 existing DLA claimants in Scotland who will be reassessed for PIP, it is expected that around 105,000 working-age disabled people will lose some or all their disability benefits by 2018, with a loss of at least £1,120 per year.”

That is an absolute disgrace in 21st century Scotland.

I heard Alex Johnstone on “Good Morning Scotland” this morning on disability benefits. He said:

“The headline budget for this will actually increase, it won’t reduce.”

He also said:

“This is not about reducing budgets.”

He needs to tell the Treasury that, because its 2013 budget document estimates a reduced spend due to disability living allowance reform of nearly £3 billion a year by 2017-18, with Scottish disabled people being expected to shoulder around £310 million of that by 2017-18.

I will return to the point that Annabelle Ewing made earlier. Inclusion Scotland says that the motivation behind the replacement of DLA with PIP has been about cutting the welfare budget. I say to Mr Johnstone that that is what people are saying, so I think that he needs to take that on board.

Food banks have been mentioned in the debate. Citizens Advice Scotland tells us that

“Between January and March 2014 citizens advice bureaux in Scotland recorded 1,311 new food parcel issues—this equates to one food parcel issue for every 50 clients who received advice.”

Oxfam Scotland, which Alex Rowley mentioned, reminds us that

“In Scotland the Trussell Trust distributed 640,000 meals last year—a fivefold increase on the previous year. Large rises are also reported by other providers”.

Oxfam also said:

“The evidence clearly shows that changes to the welfare system are a significant driver of rising foodbank use.”

It was therefore not without some sense of incredulity that I read the comments of better together Aberdeenshire, which Kevin Stewart and Annabelle Ewing mentioned. I will read out what it said:

“Far from being a sign of failure”, food banks

“are an enriching example of human compassion, faith and social cohesion.”

Undoubtedly, they are a sign of human compassion in terms of the compassion of those who give up so much of their time to help others, and for many of them it is a sign of their faith as well. However, the idea that food banks are a sign of “social cohesion” rather than a “sign of failure” is something that, frankly, no one with their head screwed on could recognise to be the case. The better together Aberdeenshire group also said that to raise the issue of food banks

“insults the thousands of people who contribute, who run and who use” them.

Let us hear what those who run food banks say. Jo Roberts of Community Food Moray told the Welfare Reform Committee that her organisation is having to provide more cold food parcels because it is seeing more

“people for whom food is the priority and electricity and heating are not”.

Denis Curran of Loaves and Fishes, in compelling evidence, told us that

“People are getting penalised for being poor, for not having, for not having the ability to do, for not having a job, and for going to the food bank.”—[Official Report, Welfare Reform Committee, 4 March 2014; c 1287, 1295.]

I do not understand how better together Aberdeenshire can take the position that it takes.

I conclude by referring briefly to the Labour amendment, which concludes:

“the best way of helping people out of poverty is with the return of a Labour government in 2015.”

We also heard that today, but of course that is not in our hands here in Scotland.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

Will you draw to a close, please?

Photo of Jamie Hepburn Jamie Hepburn Scottish National Party

Scotland has voted Labour at UK general elections for the entirety of my life and for many years before, but the Tories have formed the Government of Scotland for two thirds of that period. If that is Labour’s prescription for providing a fairer social security system and tackling poverty, what happens if the Tories win next year or, as my colleague John Mason said, at some point in the future?

Photo of Jamie Hepburn Jamie Hepburn Scottish National Party

That is why, although Jackie Baillie is right to say that it takes political will to make decisions, the constitution is important in this case. This Government has the political will, but it does not have the means to exercise that will. That is why we need a yes vote on 18 September.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

I call Alison Johnstone, to be followed by Siobhan McMahon. We are tight for time. You have to up to six minutes, but less would be more.

Photo of Alison Johnstone Alison Johnstone Green

This is one of the most important debates that we can have in the lead-up to the referendum. The creation of the post-war welfare state was a great progressive leap forward for society, and we should rightly be proud of the struggle for a system that aims to ensure that nobody is left in poverty or destitution.

Instead, we have seen the UK Government seek to stoke division between people. David Cameron’s use of the words “scrounger” and “shirker” to describe people who receive support is divisive and is an attempt to legitimise his Government’s reforms, which have not focused on the welfare and mental health of the people who are in most need, or on the urgent need to address inequality in our society.

All MSPs received a welcome flood of briefings for the debate. The one from Engender stuck out. Its shocking headline figure is:

“Since 2010, 74% of cuts to benefits, tax credits, pay and pensions have been taken from women.”

It points out that

“This rises to 81% of the ‘savings’ realised by the Treasury in 2014-15.”

It is clear that women are being hit by a gendered austerity. Engender points out that UK welfare reform has just exacerbated the gender inequality that is already pervasive in society.

The Fawcett Society has identified three main ways in which women chiefly are being hit by the cuts: through the loss of benefits and services, through the loss of public sector jobs and because, as state services are withdrawn, women will have to fill in the gap and take up further care and community responsibilities. It is hard to believe that the gender pay gap in Scotland is 13 per cent for full-time work and 34 per cent for part-time work. Women, who predominantly still manage caring duties, probably cannot find enough hours in the week or extra hours from their employer to bring their wages into line with those of their male counterparts.

Employment law is still reserved to Westminster. Why has so little progress been made? On average, women do four hours and 15 minutes of unpaid work a day, compared with men’s two hours and 18 minutes. Some 40 per cent of women in employment rely on relatives for childcare—a majority of them are female—and one in four women in her 50s is caring for a disabled or frail elderly relative. The UK Government is keen to see the pension age being lifted rapidly, and if women who do not choose to continue working are required to do so, who will take on those caring roles?

The Green amendment was not selected for debate, but it referred to the Scottish Government’s expert group on welfare, which identified two long-term but divergent visions for the future of social security. One is a contributions-based scheme that the expert group described as

“a highly individual approach ... tying benefits to personal contributions and savings.”

That requires the complexity of means testing and constant assessment to ensure that nobody gets more than they need. The other vision is a universal one that abandons means testing and complexity and provides a citizen’s basic income to everyone.

Professor Ailsa McKay, who was a member of the expert group, was a feminist economist and lifelong advocate of that universal approach. She sadly passed away before the publication of the report, and is greatly missed by her family and friends. However, I have no doubt at all that her contribution to the welfare debate will continue. The University of Glasgow is advertising for someone to fill the newly created Ailsa McKay postdoctoral research fellowship in economics to further research the relationship between a citizen’s income and gender equality.

A citizen’s income is the foundation of the Green vision for social security. This week, the Green yes campaign has published a new paper that demonstrates how a citizen’s income could work and be paid for in Scotland. I thank John Mason for his open-minded comments regarding the citizen’s income and a certain level of unconditionality. It is not a perfect proposal, but it is designed to demonstrate how Scotland can begin on its journey towards rebuilding a fair welfare system that has universality at its core. The modelling that we have done with David Comerford of the University of Stirling demonstrates how Scotland could join the ranks of the most equal countries in the world.

Under the citizen’s income proposal, 70 per cent of the lowest-earning households would be better off, with the highest-earning households losing only 11 per cent of their income. The citizen’s income is a simple idea that could reduce inequality, promote solidarity and allow each of us to make our own decisions about working, caring, learning and creating without ending up on the breadline.

While we consider introducing a citizen’s income, we can currently crack down on tax dodging by corporations and rich individuals, and we can call for an end to the inhuman sanctions regime that has led to hundreds of thousands of people relying on food banks or applying in desperation for hardship or crisis loans. Food banks must not become the norm; people should have the dignity of buying their food. I agree with Oxfam that the huge rise of food banks suggests that

“the principle of this ... social safety net” is “under threat”. We must do all that we can to protect it.

Alex Johnstone’s amendment states that the UK Government seeks to “make work pay”. If work pays, why—as the Oxfam briefing points out—are more people who are living in poverty in working households than in out-of-work households?

I agree with Jackie Baillie that the eradication of poverty requires political will; however, the current constitutional arrangement means that policies that increase poverty in Scotland can be forced upon us by those whose politics are not focused on the eradication of poverty, and those whom we in Scotland did not vote into government.

Photo of Siobhan McMahon Siobhan McMahon Labour

I have spoken in nearly all the welfare debates that the Parliament has held since my election in 2011. The subject is very close to my heart and I am extremely passionate about it, but it is far from easy. We will all have a different idea of what the welfare state’s purpose should be, which will be born out of political ideology in many cases but also shaped by our own experiences of the system. Did it work when we needed it to, or did it fail us in our time of need? For too many people across the UK today, the answer will be that the system has failed them. For too many people, the answer will be that it added to the burden that they were already experiencing and has done very little to alleviate the financial strain that they now find themselves trying to deal with day in, day out.

As the schools across Scotland start back this week, many parents will be thankful and relieved that they do not have to find the money to send their children to the cinema, swimming or to the local funfair in order for them to be just like their friends and have a good time during their summer holiday. However, other parents will still be worrying about how they will pay back the debt that they are now in as a result of paying for their children’s school uniforms, new school shoes, school bag and pencil case, as well as what is needed to go into the pencil case and everything else in between.

That is something that we, in this Parliament, should be doing something about; it is not for others in other Parliaments. We could and should take the opportunity today to talk about the things that we have control over and how we can change people’s lives. We could talk about the one in eight people in Scotland who are carers, who need our help now. We could talk about the problems that many of our disabled constituents have with transition services, or we could talk about the lack of employment opportunities that exist, especially for females and young people. Instead, we are debating what an independent Scotland’s welfare system might look like. That would be okay if the Scottish Government actually had a vision of the welfare state that it wants. However, as we know, we are presented with a list of things that the Government does not like about the current welfare state and so-called reforms and things that it would not do, such as work capability assessments and sanctions, but we get little or no information about what would replace such things.

In our briefings for today’s debate, the stark figure of 60,000 people in Scotland being sanctioned between October 2012 and December 2013 stands out. It is a horrific number, and not something that can easily be explained away. It represents not only 60,000 individuals, but also their families and dependents. That is an atrocious figure, and the UK Government should be ashamed of it.

As I have previously stated, I understand that the Scottish Government would not impose sanctions on disabled people who have been found fit for work. I welcome that. However I am unclear as to what would take the policy’s place. In its own words, the Scottish Government stated that sanctions would be replaced with a system that is

“more proportionate, personal and positive.”

That is as clear as mud. The Scottish Government has also said that it will abolish work capability assessments. Again, we do not know what would take their place. The Scottish Government’s own expert group has made it clear that assessment for incapacity benefits is necessary, but the SNP will not formulate any alternative to the work capability assessment before the referendum.

In contrast, the Labour Party asked a group of people for ideas on how to make things easier for people with disabilities. As a result of that task force, 28 recommendations were made, including recommendations about the work capability assessments.

Labour has said that we will transform the work capability assessment to make it more effective at helping disabled people into employment. The assessment that is presently carried out does not take into consideration the disabled person’s ability to work. Therefore, we have pledged to end the tick-box assessment and replace it with one that would include a detailed analysis of the jobs that each person could carry out and which could provide them with a successful career. Further to that, we would ensure that the person undergoing the assessment would receive a copy of the assessor’s report on how their disability or health condition might affect their ability to work and be told what support is available to them in order that they can work in their local area. Perhaps most important, Labour has committed to making sure that disabled people are given the central role in monitoring how the tests are conducted. They will also be asked for suggestions on how the assessments can be improved.

As our shadow minister for disabled people, Kate Green MP, said:

“We want the assessment to be part of the process of ensuring disabled people who can work get the support they need to do so, not to threaten or punish them. The test should be a gateway to identifying and assembling that support. We also recognise that not everyone can work and we’re committed to ensuring the support’s in place for those who can’t”.

The opposite benches might not agree with the vision that we in the Labour Party have put forward, but one thing is clear: we have a vision and we will talk openly about it.

Of course, the hardship that many people are experiencing is not simply down to work capability assessments. Although it is true that disabled people are nine times more likely to be affected by the austerity agenda, they are not alone. As Oxfam Scotland said in its briefing for today’s debate,

“the evidence clearly shows that changes to the welfare system are a significant driver of rising foodbank use.”

Research that was published in June shows that more than 20 million meals were distributed by UK food banks in the past year—an increase of 54 per cent on the previous year. Those statistics are stomach-churning, but what the people who are using services like these need is a solution to their problems—problems that have been inflicted on them. They need that now, not in five weeks or five months, but now. This Parliament is letting down every person who has used a food bank by simply talking about the problem and using it as a football for a debate on the constitution. That is something that I will not be part of.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

Could you draw to a close, please?

Photo of Siobhan McMahon Siobhan McMahon Labour

Finally, the general election next year will mark 70 years since Clement Attlee, the founder of the welfare state, became Prime Minister. I wanted to end with a poem that Attlee wrote, which struck a chord with me when thinking about today’s debate.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

I am afraid that you are out of time, so that is for another day, perhaps.

Photo of Siobhan McMahon Siobhan McMahon Labour

It goes:

“In Limehouse, in Limehouse, by night as well as day,

I hear the feet of children who go to work or play,

Of children born of sorrow,

The workers of tomorrow

How shall they work tomorrow

Who get no bread today?”

Photo of Murdo Fraser Murdo Fraser Conservative

This has been, at times, a rather bad-tempered debate. I hope that I can bring some calm and sense to the close.

This is a good day to be discussing welfare reform. This morning, the latest unemployment and workforce figures showed that, again, unemployment is down in Scotland and across the UK, by a total of 6.4 per cent. The employment rate in Scotland has reached a record high. Since the UK coalition Government came to power, some 1.8 million new jobs have been created, three quarters of which are in full-time positions. Why is that important? Because, like Alex Rowley—probably a rare point of agreement between us—I believe that creating jobs for people is the best way in which to improve their living standards and reduce their dependence on welfare.

Welfare reform is working. As Alex Johnstone reminded us, the proportion of workless households is the lowest ever recorded, and the proportion of children in those households is at a record low. The number of children in households where no one has ever worked is at its lowest level for 15 years. The inactivity rate has never been lower, which is reflected in falling numbers of people claiming inactivity benefits.

The welfare system that the coalition Government inherited was broken. It had too many disincentives to people working to try to better their situations. The UK Government’s approach to trying to reverse that is clearly having an impact.

Welfare reform is popular. According to an Ipsos MORI poll that was carried out last year, 50 per cent of people in Scotland believed that the welfare system was too generous as against only 25 per cent who thought that it was not generous enough. A similar poll showed that 73 per cent of people in Scotland supported a general benefits cap as against only 12 per cent who opposed it. There is actually more support in Scotland for a benefits cap than in the UK as a whole.

Liam McArthur reminded us that everyone agrees with welfare reform—or so they say. Everyone agrees that the previous system simply did not help people when they needed help and that its costs rose too quickly. However, although those in other parties claim to support welfare reform, in practice, they oppose every measure proposed by the UK Government to try to deal with it. If they believe in welfare reform, they need to tell us precisely what measures they would implement to reduce the growth in the welfare budget.

I turn to some of the points raised in the debate.

Alex Johnstone reminded us that we regularly hear from the SNP that welfare reform is taking £6 billion out of the economy. That claim would have some credibility if the SNP was proposing to reverse on independence those so-called cuts, so let us look precisely at what the SNP proposes in its white paper.

We know that by far the two biggest components in that £6 billion are the change in the uprating of benefits inflation linking from the retail prices index to the consumer prices index and the removal of child benefit from higher earners. Between them, those two changes make up the vast bulk of those savings. However, I could see nothing in the white paper about reversing those changes. The white paper says that benefits will rise with inflation, but does that refer to the CPI or the RPI? We can only assume that it is the CPI. If I am wrong, no doubt I will stand corrected in the minister’s closing speech.

The only detailed proposals on welfare in the white paper are to remove the spare room subsidy, which has already been mitigated by the actions of this devolved Parliament, and stop the roll-out of universal credit and personal independence payments. The best that can be said about those changes is that the costs are marginal in the context of the total savings from welfare reform.

Therefore, the proposition that the SNP puts forward in the debate that voting for independence will make a huge difference when it comes to welfare and, in the words of the Government motion,

“only with the full powers of independence can the UK Government welfare cuts be halted” is shown to be utterly worthless because the bulk of the reductions will not be reversed under the SNP’s proposals.

What would the welfare system in an independent Scotland be? We do not know. How much would it cost? We do not know. Would taxes have to rise to pay for higher benefits? We do not know and, as Jackie Baillie reminded us, we do not even know what currency those benefits would be paid in. The SNP is using welfare policy to try to argue the case for independence but, without any detail on its alternatives, the claims that it makes are simply dishonest.

I understand that yesterday at the Welfare Reform Committee, Nicola Sturgeon said that she foresaw no net increase in welfare costs in an independent Scotland beyond proposals that have already been announced.

Photo of Murdo Fraser Murdo Fraser Conservative

I am sorry. From a sedentary position, the cabinet secretary has corrected me. She says that that is what the welfare review group recommended. I would be interested to know what the SNP recommends, because we have heard nothing in the debate about its proposals. The cabinet secretary comes to the chamber and seems to suggest otherwise. All the rhetoric is about reversing all the cuts from Westminster. That is not what she said yesterday and it is not what her review group had to say.

The Deputy Presiding Officer:

The member is in his last minute.

Photo of Murdo Fraser Murdo Fraser Conservative

I would have been happy to give way, but perhaps the cabinet secretary’s colleague can address those points in her closing speech.

We know from the work that the Institute for Fiscal Studies has done that Scotland would face greater fiscal challenges if it were independent than if it stayed in the UK. There is no magic money tree. There will not be more money to spend on benefits if we become independent. In fact, there will be less.

The SNP is trying cynically to play on the fears of those who are in poverty and of the disabled by promising that independence will mean that they have more money and greater security, but it cannot produce any concrete promises to back up those proposals. It is a deeply cynical and disgraceful tactic of which SNP members should be ashamed.

Photo of Michael McMahon Michael McMahon Labour

I welcomed the prospect of this debate on welfare when I learned that it had been scheduled, because it is absolutely right that the people of Scotland should hear from the Scottish Government how it plans to introduce its robust, effective, reliable and affordable welfare system in an independent Scotland. What a pity, then, that for far too much of this afternoon all that we have heard is that the SNP does not like Westminster and that it does not like the current system of welfare in the UK. We have heard virtually nothing about what change there would be should Scotland vote yes on 18 September.

Photo of Michael McMahon Michael McMahon Labour

I would like to make some progress, if you do not mind.

Instead of real answers about how our welfare system would continue if we separated, what we have got is an aspirational wish list of vague promises of a fairer system, with no price tag attached. There is nothing wrong with being aspirational for your country and its people—we all are—but it is another thing for the SNP to criticise the current welfare system without providing answers on the detail of what it would seek to replace it with. We have repeatedly been promised such information, but it has never materialised. Unless the minister reveals the SNP’s blueprint to us in her closing speech, the SNP looks as though it is going to continue to ask the people of Scotland to vote in the referendum on a prospectus that has a welfare-shaped black hole at its core.

Photo of Nicola Sturgeon Nicola Sturgeon Scottish National Party

I have said before and I will say again that if we get the powers of independence we will not proceed with a £300 million cut in support for disabled people. Will Michael McMahon answer the question: will a Labour Government proceed with that cut or not? It is a simple question; can we have a straight answer?

Photo of Michael McMahon Michael McMahon Labour

I am quite sure that the cabinet secretary would like to boil everything down to a straight yes or no answer, but the fact of the matter is that she is premising all her questions on a vote that will take place five weeks from now. The Labour Party is looking at promoting the welfare system at the general election in 2015, and we will get the answers at that time. When we have won this referendum the SNP will get more answers than we will get from it, and that is a fact. [Interruption.]

Photo of Michael McMahon Michael McMahon Labour

I welcomed the report of the expert working group, but that was never going to produce the detailed answers that we need, because it was never given the remit from the Scottish Government to do so. The expert group identified that there are difficulties in designing entirely new schemes and that the timescales involved in ensuring that they will operate effectively will mean that any changes are unlikely to be in place by 2016. Indeed, the expert group’s first report suggested that Scotland should share its system with the UK for a transitional period that would last for at least five years. That was before we had the complication of not knowing what currency we would use while we shared that system.

The Scottish Government subsequently announced that it wished to make priority changes to social security immediately following separation, but it has not yet set out how it would be able to consult on and legislate for a new system, then design, build and test it within 18 months. What we have is a recommendation for a national convention on welfare, to be formed in 2015, to discuss the detail of benefits proposals, which the SNP says we have to vote on in five weeks’ time. That means that the detail will not be known until after the referendum.

More than half of Scots receive social security payments in some form, but the SNP will not tell us how much it will cost to set up a new welfare system, and independent forecasters at the IFS are projecting that we will have a worse fiscal position than that of the UK as a whole in the years ahead. This debate could have clarified for the Scottish people what they can expect from a welfare system in an independent Scotland, but the only welfare guarantee that we have from the SNP is uncertainty.

As the debate wore on, Jamie Hepburn and others referred to the better together Aberdeenshire Facebook page. I pay all deference to my colleague Lewis Macdonald, but the people of Aberdeen are very often beyond my comprehension. I do not understand why SNP members repeatedly went on about that Facebook page. It looks as though it might well be the new issue—rather than pandas, aliens and what side of the road we will drive on—when it comes to the next television debate.

Photo of Michael McMahon Michael McMahon Labour

I am certainly not going to give way to Annabelle Ewing after her disgraceful contribution.

We saw some agreement in this afternoon’s debate on sanctions, the bedroom tax and food banks. Kevin Stewart, John Mason, Ken Macintosh and others found common cause. The cabinet secretary and Siobhan McMahon clearly believe in issues around disability, and that is quite right, because when Inclusion Scotland makes it absolutely clear that the current programme of welfare reform is having a devastating and disproportionate impact on disabled people in Scotland, we must take cognisance of that.

John Mason asked something very important. He made the reasonable request that we should work together and he asked why, when we have such agreement, we could not work with them. On the other hand, Ms Sturgeon claimed that Labour does not care about Scotland’s poor. That is the difference. We focus on need and not nationality; that is what divides us and what the SNP cannot understand about this debate.

The SNP’s plans for post-independence welfare are paper thin. Even its own expert group on welfare has said that there would be a serious risk of disruption to benefit payments if we were to leave the UK benefits system. Again, the expert group made that report before the issue of the currency union and its inability to operate came up.

Although the SNP has made pledges, it has not made proposals for what the system would be changed to. We came along this afternoon to look for answers about what we will be voting on in September, but we are left with no conclusion other than that the only safe choice on welfare is a vote to remain part of the British welfare state that I am proud to say Labour created and that we will always be the best to defend.

Photo of Margaret Burgess Margaret Burgess Scottish National Party

Like others, I do not think that this has been the best-tempered debate. Something was said at the end there that I absolutely agree with: we are miles apart from the Labour Party and its better together pals in how we want to address the issue of social security, particularly in an independent Scotland.

At the start of the debate, the Deputy First Minister asked Jackie Baillie two questions about Labour’s position. She asked what new powers this Parliament is guaranteed to get, if we are short of a yes vote, that would allow us to sort the incomes of disabled women and children. She also asked whether the Labour Party would halt the roll-out of personal independence payments. We did not get an answer to that question. There is no answer, and nobody on the Labour benches answered it, because their answer is no—they are tied to same Westminster system as their pals in the Tory party.

That has been clear in this debate. Labour members have huffed and hawed and tried to get around the question using all sorts of things such as the history of the Labour Party, poems and whatever else. The reality is that they support the Tory welfare system. It was just confirmed by Michael McMahon that Labour supports welfare being held within the UK.

Photo of Margaret Burgess Margaret Burgess Scottish National Party

Yes, because Labour would rather have the Tories dismantling the system than have a system here in Scotland that supports and meets the need of people in Scotland.

Speaker after speaker has talked about the failed welfare state that is clearly no longer meeting the needs of our most vulnerable citizens. We all see examples of that every day. I see a UK Government bringing out measures that have little or no support in Scotland and that, as Alison Johnstone said, we are powerless to stop. The Scottish Government does not have the power.

We will always do what we can to mitigate the worst of the reforms, and Jamie Hepburn outlined a number of the issues that we have taken up. We have a strong record in taking action and have backed it up with as much funding as we can muster under the constraints of a devolved block grant. However, mitigation is simply softening the blows of Westminster. That is not enough for me—our people deserve more than that. The Scottish Government’s ambition for Scotland is much higher than that. We have an ambition for Scotland.

The Government has set out a clear vision for welfare in an independent Scotland. We will halt the roll-out of the discredited universal credit. We will replace personal independence payments with a benefit that ensures that people who have a disability are treated with dignity and respect. We will abolish the bedroom tax. We will increase the carer’s allowance. We will increase benefits and the minimum wage in line with inflation.

As the Deputy First Minister said in her opening remarks, Scotland is a wealthy country. Currently, however, social protection expenditure as a percentage of GDP is lower in Scotland than in the rest of the UK, and low in comparison with the rest of the European Union. We can afford to do things differently.

The Scottish Government’s vision for social security in an independent Scotland is one in which we all contribute, just as we all receive help and support from the welfare state throughout our lives. We recognise that we all have a role in supporting and sustaining the system for future generations.

Through devolution, as John Mason mentioned, Scotland has responsibility for education and skills but not for employment, tax or welfare policies. The majority of the people of Scotland want the Scottish Parliament to have control of welfare. All three of those areas are crucial to supporting people into sustained employment, and I think that we all agree that sustained employment is the route out of poverty.

We make clear in “Scotland’s Future” that, when people can work, they should work. In any case, we believe that the vast majority of people want to work, and the expert working group came to the same conclusion. Work is important for people’s wellbeing just as much as for their prosperity.

We heard today about the increase in the level of in-work poverty, which shows that the equation that work is a route out of poverty is not always true. That is why we support measures such as the Scottish Government’s social wage and the living wage, which will make a real difference to the people of Scotland. We are leading by example in ensuring that all the staff who are covered by the public sector pay policy are paid the Scottish living wage.

Those who, for whatever reason, cannot work should be helped to lead rich, fulfilling lives. Our call for dignity and respect to be maintained contrasts directly with the UK Government’s approach, and now it contrasts clearly with the Labour Party’s approach. Labour’s approach, as shown by measures such as the current policy on sanctions, does little for people’s self-respect and self-esteem.

Those policies do little to provide people with the support that they need, and Scottish Government research has shown that the most disadvantaged are particularly vulnerable to being sanctioned.

Photo of Michael McMahon Michael McMahon Labour

Does the minister recognise that the research that was conducted on the Welfare Reform Committee’s behalf showed that the same problems existed right across England, Wales and Northern Ireland? Why does she want to abandon them to that fate in order to pursue her own issues in Scotland?

Photo of Margaret Burgess Margaret Burgess Scottish National Party

That is a ridiculous argument. We recognise that the policies are not helping people throughout the UK, but we want to do something about it here in Scotland, and we have an opportunity to do so on 18 September. We should raise our standards and our ambitions.

We will not all go down together—we will lead by example and help the rest of the UK at the same time.

Photo of Margaret Burgess Margaret Burgess Scottish National Party

I have no idea where the Labour Party is coming from just now, or where it is going, with regard to what the Deputy First Minister has just said. The Labour Party is putting forward an absolute nonsense argument.

The most worrying thing is that there are more cuts still to come. We have heard today that 100,000 disabled people could lose between £1,000 and £3,000 a year as a result of the change from DLA to PIP. Again, there is no response from the Labour Party on that—it is simply tied to its Tory allies on the matter.

Jackie Baillie has been asked on several occasions whether the Labour Party will reverse the change to PIP. We have had no answer, and that is because the answer is no.

We have to remember that Labour has signed up with its Tory and Liberal pals to welfare reform. It has signed up to continued austerity, to universal credit and to the UK welfare reforms that will put 100,000 more children and 100,000 more disabled people in poverty. Jackie Baillie is shaking her head and saying that that is nonsense. She has had the opportunity today to tell the people of Scotland what Labour is going to do about welfare reform, and she has not done so.

For me, the issues around benefits and welfare reform crystallise the clear choice that we have to make in September. The choice is between a future in which some of the most important decisions about our country are made by Westminster Governments whether Tory or Labour—and, in the Tory case, Governments that are often not elected in Scotland—and a future in which the people of Scotland have the power to determine our own course and have responsibility for making the most of our extraordinary potential.

That is what independence is about. It is about making that choice for the benefit of the people of Scotland. It is about grasping the opportunity to make things better. We all agree that the welfare system is not working, and we have made proposals to make it better, with real change for the people of Scotland, but the Labour Party cannot accept that—it would rather stick with its Tory alliance.

Photo of Margaret Burgess Margaret Burgess Scottish National Party

I will wind up.

The only way in which to get a welfare and social security system that is fair, that treats people with dignity and respect and that meets the needs of the people of Scotland is to vote yes on 18 September.