This article describes the centralised nature of the UK, briefly describes the changes now under way in Scotland and Wales and then analyses differences in output per head as between nations and regions. It then considers the scope for devolu-tion, including fiscal devolution within England. The United Kingdom today is one of the most fiscally-centralised of all OECD countries, but there will soon be reform in Scotland and Wales, with significant devolution of tax-raising powers to Edinburgh and Cardiff. In England, there is currently no ‘state ’ or ‘regional ’ tier of government. There have been significant differences in GDP/GVA per head of the nations and regions of the UK for many decades. Efforts to ‘rebalance ’ the GDP/ GVA totals sho...
Public spending devolution in practice is widely seen as more appropriate for addressing varied poli...
The article assesses the consolidation of devolution in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in turn...
The article assesses the consolidation of devolution in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in turn...
The purpose of this article is the following. First, we provide a comparison of the degree of fiscal...
The UK has traditionally been viewed as a classic example of a unitary state in which central instit...
The UK has traditionally been viewed as a classic example of a unitary state in which central instit...
The UK has traditionally been viewed as a classic example of a unitary state in which central instit...
The UK has traditionally been viewed as a classic example of a unitary state in which central instit...
The UK’s devolution reforms have been piecemeal, directed at specific territorial issues in one or o...
In this paper we provide a non-technical account of recent research relevant to the economics of dev...
The purpose of this article is the following. First, we provide a comparison of the degree of fiscal...
Devolution in the United Kingdom (UK) is at its most developed stage ever. From the advent of Scotti...
The UK has formal arrangements for tax transfers to Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, but not f...
Public spending devolution in practice is widely seen as more appropriate for addressing varied poli...
Public spending devolution in practice is widely seen as more appropriate for addressing varied poli...
Public spending devolution in practice is widely seen as more appropriate for addressing varied poli...
The article assesses the consolidation of devolution in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in turn...
The article assesses the consolidation of devolution in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in turn...
The purpose of this article is the following. First, we provide a comparison of the degree of fiscal...
The UK has traditionally been viewed as a classic example of a unitary state in which central instit...
The UK has traditionally been viewed as a classic example of a unitary state in which central instit...
The UK has traditionally been viewed as a classic example of a unitary state in which central instit...
The UK has traditionally been viewed as a classic example of a unitary state in which central instit...
The UK’s devolution reforms have been piecemeal, directed at specific territorial issues in one or o...
In this paper we provide a non-technical account of recent research relevant to the economics of dev...
The purpose of this article is the following. First, we provide a comparison of the degree of fiscal...
Devolution in the United Kingdom (UK) is at its most developed stage ever. From the advent of Scotti...
The UK has formal arrangements for tax transfers to Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, but not f...
Public spending devolution in practice is widely seen as more appropriate for addressing varied poli...
Public spending devolution in practice is widely seen as more appropriate for addressing varied poli...
Public spending devolution in practice is widely seen as more appropriate for addressing varied poli...
The article assesses the consolidation of devolution in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in turn...
The article assesses the consolidation of devolution in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland in turn...