News

Home

Join us

British Airways merger plan poses new threat to workers

Working life in a car factory

20 years after fall of Berlin Wall, capitalist triumphalism turns rotten

Leeds bin strike - week ten

'Modernisation' means cuts: Support the postal workers' fightback

Click here to go to the Socialism 2009 pages

We want workers' MPs on a worker's wage

BA cabin crews come out fighting

Huddersfield march for jobs

Afghanistan: anti-war demo

Darling you're talking rubbish!

Strikes sweep across Yorkshire

Daily Mail homophobia

Afghanistan: Troops out!

FBU strike to defend fire service

Search...

Policies...

Marxism...

 

Socialist Party logo Socialist Party on the climate change demo December 2007, pic Paul Mattsson Socialist Party News
Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

Link to this page: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/517/3660

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Printable versionPrintable version

email to friendemail to friend

Share tools

Home   |   The Socialist 23 January 2008   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

SNP 'trusts' are PFI in disguise

THE SNP-led Scottish government has published a consultation paper setting out its 'alternative' to the Private Finance Initiative (PFI) and Public-Private Partnership (PPP) schemes in Scotland.

Brian Smith, Glasgow Unison social work services secretary, personal capacity

The government proposes to set up a Scottish Futures Trust (SFT) as a means of raising finance to fund public-sector capital projects such as schools, hospitals, transport links, etc. The SFT will also include housing which was not previously part of the PFI framework in Scotland.

The paper talks about how the limitations on the Scottish Parliament over public borrowing and tax powers, UK fiscal policies and EU constraints hinder "off-balance sheet" approaches to public spending. However the paper welcomes the "involvement of the private sector in infrastructure investment".

The Unison union has responded that the "proposals are in both rhetoric and substance far removed from the 2006 SNP plan" and says that "private profit is still taken out at the contractor level.... This results in the same profiteering and inflexibility inherent in PFI". The Glasgow Herald economics editor suggests "that the picture that emerges bears little resemblance to what was proposed sixteen months ago".

The SFT will be a Scottish-wide private limited company and will raise finance from bonds but will also borrow from commercial banks and private investors. It will basically operate as a single PFI vehicle with public authorities and local councils paying a charge to the SFT for the use of facilities and support services.

The SNP claim this national approach will generate an 'economy of scale' that will be more efficient that the current individual PFI schemes. There is no mention of whether workers will or will not transfer to the private companies under the new arrangements.

The SFT itself will be "non-profit making". However the private-sector companies and banks who have made millions from PFI will still rip off the public sector and get their share of working-class people's taxes through the same overpriced, inflexible contracts and loan repayment charges.

Public-sector workers and Scotland's wider population will soon recognise that there is more that unites the SNP with their Labour predecessors than Scotland's First Minister, Alex Salmond of the SNP, would care to admit.

Whilst the SNP have delivered some small popular changes in the last few months, on the crucial economic issues they remain the servants of big business and the private companies that have sucked the blood out of our public services for years.


In this issue

Why should we pay for capitalist crisis?

Shock of recession draws near


Workplace news

Strike against poverty deals in PCS

Marching behind the Burslem 12


Socialist Party women

New threats to abortion rights


Scotland

Defend Tommy Sheridan

SNP 'trusts' are PFI in disguise


Socialist Party campaign news

Tower Colliery closes: A brave attempt

Post office campaign: Changes in the law to break the poor

Keep Marksbury library open!


International socialist news and analysis

Bolivia at breaking point


Workplace analysis

NUT national executive: Left fighter stopped from standing

More work for less pay


Socialist Party workplace news

Shelter staff under attack from management

Cadburys close Keynsham factory

Council spends thousands fighting workers' pay claims

No more stooge union reps!


 

Home   |   The Socialist 23 January 2008   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Scottish National Party:

Scottish National Party: One year in power - but little for workers to celebrate

SNP budget will not satisfy expectations

Salmond's first hundred days

SNP:

Fight for a Scottish parliament with full powers

Why Labour won the Glenrothes by-election

Scotland council tax to be scrapped

Trusts:

First strike against Trust schools

The NHS today - can it meet everyone's health needs?

PFI:

Private Finance Initiative still threatens NHS future

Fast news

Scotland:

Glasgow North East by-election: Mass abstentions in Labour's 'surprise win'

Return of al-Magrahi to Libya ignites a political storm

Public-sector:

No to cuts in jobs and services

Action now to defend public sector

Banks:

Capitalists in crisis

Public services

Unison:

Unison witch-hunt: Defend the Four campaign gets a boost

Housing workers in 'sleep over'

Glasgow:

Far right SDL driven out of Glasgow city centre

Tommy Sheridan - a socialist fighter on a worker's wage

PPP:

Johnson's Prince of Darkness

Tangled web at Metronet

Public-Private Partnership:

What 'public-private partnerships really mean