With apparent panic in Westminster over the possibility of
Scotland voting for independence next week, a new federal UK deal appears to be
on offer for not only Scotland, but England’s regions, Wales and Northern
Ireland too, and about time. We have had to listen to the Scots rather self-important and dismal debate (from both sides) for what seems like forever now,
from an utterly impotent stand point. I think it is time for the rest of us to
have our say on the constitutional arrangements by which we are ruled in the
UK. In London, and other parts of the country, we don’t want a permanent Tory
government or Labour’s Tory light version either, which is surely the best we
can hope for if Scotland goes its own way.
I think we will see more demands for English devolution in
the coming months, whatever the Scots decide to do. The genie is well and truly
out of the bottle now, and we the people of London, should get onto the front
foot and turn this opportunity to our advantage.
Last year, the London Finance Commission, chaired by Tony
Travers of the LSE, produced a report ‘Raising the Capital’. Below is an
edited extract from the report:
The Commission
believes that there would be more jobs and growth in London if the government
of London had greater financial autonomy.
Although Scotland and
Wales now enjoy substantial devolved power, England has not seen anything like
the same degree of devolution. London has a relatively new system of city-wide
government which, in the Commission’s view, could readily wield more power and
fiscal autonomy.
London is a leading
international city which has, somehow, become a model for free-wheeling, tolerant,
metropolitan living. It has a fast-growing population and, along with its
surrounding counties, one of the largest regional economies in the world.
At present, London
(and, indeed, England as a whole) is an extreme outlier compared with other cities
and countries. Only a tiny proportion of the taxes raised in London are
determined by the city’s government. Even after the reforms of April 2013,
barely 7% of all the tax paid by London residents and businesses is retained by
the Mayor and the boroughs. The equivalent figure in New York is over 60%, in Tokyo
it is over 70% and in Paris over 80%.
London’s population is
equivalent to those of Scotland and Wales combined. Its economy is almost
double the size of these nations together.
As the London population
grows to nine and then ten million people by 2030, there will need to be
massive investment in enabling infrastructure simply to accommodate these new
residents and, indeed, commuters. The Commission is convinced that London would
be better able to prioritise decisions about investment.
The report goes onto suggest that council tax, business rates, stamp duty land tax, annual tax on enveloped dwellings and capital gains property disposal tax should be devolved to London government.
Whilst the report fights shy of recommending income tax
raising powers for London at this stage, it does note that Scotland has some
such powers, and may get more, and although there would be some practical
difficulties with devolving income tax revenue, it does not rule it out in the
longer run.
The report also goes out of its way to say that it is not
suggesting City State status for London,
but having read through it, I was left with the impression that it is certainly
possible, and even desirable, given London’s economic power and its
multi-cultural and relatively young population. One step at a time, I guess.
Whichever way you look at it, London is different from the
rest of the UK culturally, and needs more power for its government to shape its
society. As an immigrant to London myself, from the north of England, I’ve
always felt that being a Londoner was more of a state of mind, rather than
where you are born. The diverse nature of London makes it so.
It is not just about London though, the Core Cities
group, which includes London, are making similar noises about devolved powers.
These English cities: Manchester,
Liverpool, Birmingham, Leeds, Sheffield, Newcastle, Nottingham and Bristol, (and
now including Glasgow), have different challenges to rural areas and are all
demanding more power to run their affairs.
The UK is one of the most centrally run countries in the
world, devolving more power (financial particularly) will increase democracy
and will give us the chance to develop our communities in the way we think is
best. And it might just save us English who hate the Tories from a miserable
future under an extreme neo-liberal dominated Tory/UKIP government.
It is essential, I think, that the inevitable calls for an
English devolution, are defeated. England is a large country by population
measures and needs to be governed as regionally and locally as possible, not
England wide.
Wouldn’t the people’s capture of London be a far bigger prize than Scotland? Wake up London, it is time to take our future into our own hands.
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