FISCAL DEVOLUTION

Fiscal devolution comes at a cost – but it's worth it

Rachel Reeves' discovery of a fiscal black hole may be had news for the public purse, but it could hasten fiscal devolution and a return to Total Place, says Heather Jameson

Rachel Reeves

The weekend was filled with stories of the chancellor clutching her pearls in mock horror over the state of the public purse, as though it was a revelation.

But when the details of the £22bn gaping hole left by her predecessors emerged even the most cynical and astute of analysts, the Institute of Fiscal Studies' Paul Johnson, admitted that there were more unfunded commitments than even he had bargained for.

Heather Jameson

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