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.
