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UK Local Elections 2026
15APR

IFS rejects Scottish Labour plan same day

3 min read
13:21UTC

Lowdown

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

The IFS rejected Scottish Labour's plan within 24 hours, on the same grounds it had rejected every rival.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), an independent UK fiscal watchdog, published its initial response to Scottish Labour's 13 April 2026 Holyrood manifesto within 24 hours of launch, finding short-term spending commitments exceed unallocated Scottish Government funding for the current year and that the long-term welfare vision is "hard to see" being delivered without substantial Scottish income tax rises on earners below £100,000. 1

The verdict follows the same pattern as the IFS's earlier dismissals of the Scottish Conservatives' pensioner cut and Reform UK's proposed tax cuts , and the cross-party summary on 11 April that found no Scottish fiscal plan credible . Scottish Labour was the fifth and last of the major contesting parties to publish; its offer failed the same test as the others, on the same day it was released.

Same-day adjudication matters in a campaign where the fiscal question is being asked of every party by the same institution, to the same standard. A party whose manifesto is rejected a week after launch can absorb the story into a cycle of other news. A party rejected before the evening bulletin has no separation between the pitch and the verdict.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Scotland has its own parliament, called Holyrood, which has powers to set some taxes and decide how money is spent on services like health, education and social care. An election for Holyrood is happening on 7 May 2026. The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) is an independent research organisation that checks whether political parties' spending plans add up. It has been assessing every Scottish party's manifesto this election. Scottish Labour published its manifesto on 13 April. The IFS checked it and said it promises more spending than the money available in the current year, and that the longer-term welfare plans would need income tax rises on workers earning under £100,000 to fund. This is the IFS's verdict on the fifth and final Scottish party, completing a full sweep.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The structural root cause is the asymmetry in Scottish devolution's fiscal powers.

The Scottish Parliament can raise or lower income tax rates and bands for Scottish taxpayers, but it cannot borrow for current spending (only for capital projects). This means any manifesto promising current spending above Barnett formula allocations must either be explicit about the income tax rises needed or rely on hoped-for UK Supplementary Estimates that may not materialise. Scottish Labour's manifesto sits in this gap.

A secondary cause is the political cost of income tax honesty. Scottish income tax already diverges from England's at higher rates for Scottish taxpayers earning above £28,850 (who pay more than their English equivalents). Any party proposing additional Scottish income tax rises on earners below £100,000 is asking a majority of Scottish workers to pay more than English equivalents at the same income level, a politically difficult position in a unionist party.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    With all five Scottish parties dismissed, the IFS can no longer function as a fiscal tiebreaker. The SNP's independence pitch, the only policy the IFS cannot audit in isolation, becomes the de facto differentiator for the final two weeks.

  • Risk

    Scottish Labour's inability to pass the IFS test strengthens the SNP's 'competence' narrative heading into the last weeks, as Labour is now indistinguishable from the parties it accuses of fiscal irresponsibility.

First Reported In

Update #4 · 22 Days to Go: Greens Take a Reform Seat in Kent

Institute for Fiscal Studies· 15 Apr 2026
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