Nicola Sturgeon hoped the report would encourage support of independence by showing an alternative to Westminster
austerity and the "
Brexit spiral". A
YouGov survey in June 2018 reported a marginal increase in support for independence with 13% of respondents more likely to support independence against 6% who were less likely to. She hoped the report would also settle the question of which currency an independent Scotland would use, which was considered the "
Achilles' heel" of the
SNP's
2014 Scottish independence referendum campaign. The
SNP launched a series of "National Assemblies" in summer 2018 in
Ayr,
Aviemore and
Edinburgh, specifically to discuss and debate the findings of the report with a view to coming to a consensus. There were mixed reactions from
SNP members, and some disapproval within the
SNP when the report was not debated at the party’s 2018 conference.
Alex Neil, an
SNP MSP and former government minister, said that he believed the issue should be debated to show that the party was not afraid of public scrutiny. There was criticism from opposition politicians, including
Scottish Conservatives leader
Ruth Davidson and
Scottish Labour leader
Richard Leonard (with the latter branding the Growth Commission as the "cuts commission", referring to the budget cuts that the report deemed necessary to lower the deficit), as well as some independence campaigners who were anxious that capping public expenditure and keeping the pound could damage the case for an independent Scotland.
George Kerevan, a former
SNP MSP, worried the six tests could leave Scotland using the pound indefinitely and result in cuts to services and spending. He said "
Sterlingisation and the six tests would effectively negate the very point of seeking independence for Scotland". The
Common Weal, a pro-independence
think tank criticised the Annual Solidarity Payment saying that Scotland should not be reliant on "buying in" services from the United Kingdom. These Islands, a pro-union campaign group, disputed the claim that an independent Scotland could be set up for £450 million as "patently unrealistic", pointing out that the
Scottish Government had recently spent £178 million on an IT project to handle rural subsidy payments. The
Institute for Fiscal Studies said that the Commission's plans implied austerity as it could mean that
public spending would drop by 4% of
GDP over a decade. In an interview David Philips, the author of the IFS study, described the Growth Commission’s proposals as a "continuation of austerity", but he commended the commission for tackling the problem head on. Defending the report,
Andrew Wilson said "We have an argument that will be an effort. Money doesn't drop out of a tree, Rome wasn't built in a day, nothing falls in your lap. You don't win the lottery. What happens is you get a tool box and the ability to work, and that work will be worth it." At the
SNP Conference in April 2019 opposition to the Growth Commission's recommendation of
Sterlingisation grew as
SNP members defied the party leadership and voted to install a new currency as "soon as practicable after independence day". In April 2021 Nicola Sturgeon said the figures in the 2018 report were "completely out of date", but defended the underlying approach of the report. She ruled out any new analysis of the economics of an independent Scotland until the eve of a second referendum on independence. The Growth Commission's recommendation on currency remained unpopular and in November 2021
SNP delegates at the party conference voted 481 to 37 backing a resolution to create a Scottish
Central Bank charged with issuing a new Scottish pound at shorter timescale agreed at the 2019 Party Conference. Dr Tim Rideout, convenor of the Scottish Currency Group, who put forward the resolution, described the
SNP's currency plans as a "dangerous experiment" and hoped the passing of the resolution would put a stake through the heart of the "
Sterlingisation Zombie". In March 2022,
Kate Forbes Scotland’s
Finance Minister revealed a new economic plan to boost Scotland's economy over 10 years.
Scotland’s National Strategy for Economic Transformation differed to the Growth Commission in that it outlined how Scotland can improve the economy whilst remaining part of the
United Kingdom. == See also ==