Good morning, Madam Chair.
It's very nice to see you there in Canada, London, and New York.
Good morning, distinguished members of the committee. On behalf of the Scottish Women's Budget Group, I would like to thank the committee for this very special opportunity to address you and for the recognition of our work that this invitation represents. I would also like to commend the committee for its initiative in undertaking this current study on gender budgets. I hope that our own relevant parliamentary committees will follow your lead and that a similar study on gender budgets might be undertaken in Scotland.
I would also like to imagine a scenario where witnesses could offer such frank, open, and progressive evidence to the committees of the Scottish Parliament on the importance and benefits of gender budget analysis, as previous witnesses to this committee have done.
I look forward to the rest of the study and to hearing your final recommendations and decisions.
Madam Chair, thank you for recognizing our time pressures and that we have to leave the session, as you say, at the end of the first hour. Thank you very much for accommodating our other appointments.
I will now make some comments on the history, character, and outputs of the Scottish Women's Budget Group, which hereafter I will refer to as SWBG.
SWBG is a non-funded group of individual women with a commitment to positive change for women through analysis of resource allocation and policy in the budget process in Scotland. SWBG was formed in 1999, following the creation of newly devolved government institutions in Scotland, including the primary legislature of the Scottish Parliament and the Scottish Executive of ministers and the civil service, now known as the Scottish Government, following elections in May 2007.
SWBG membership is fairly small, with some 25 women on the list and an active core of 12 to 15 women. Our activities over our lifetime have included tracking the budgetary process in Scotland, responding to government proposals for spending plans, responding to consultations on key policy areas, giving evidence to parliamentary committees on the budget process and the incorporation of gender analysis within it, and giving evidence to committees on key policy areas such as child care, social justice, skills, and economic development strategies. Our responses are formulated collectively, drawing on the wide range of skills and policy expertise that members bring to the group.
A brief summary of the promotion of gender budget analysis in the Scottish budgetary process runs as follows. Early in its existence, the SWBG lobbied the first minister for finance in the first round of draft spending plans for the Scottish Executive. He responded positively to the initiative and lent his support. SWBG further lobbied for inclusion of a commitment to gender analysis in government spending plans and budgetary processes in the first equality strategy of the Scottish Executive. With support from the Equal Opportunities Commission, which was the statutory body for sex discrimination, which has now been subsumed within the new Equality and Human Rights Commission, SWBG lobbied for the creation of a ministerial advisory group on integrating equalities in the budget process.
There are a number of important aspects of the Scottish policy context to note at this point. The first is that the commitment to equality is enshrined in the Scotland Act and in the founding principles of the Scottish Parliament. While very positive, it is a commitment to equal opportunities, not to gender specifically. This led to the development of a broad-reaching equality strategy covering a number of strands of equalities, including race, disability, sexual orientation, age, religious belief or faith, and gender.
While there have been specific policy initiatives directed at women and men and a considerable program of work specifically targeting violence against women, sex equality and gender policy have not been a priority area of government policy or related spending.
In policy terms particularly, for example, in social justice policy, there has been a tendency for social justice and equality to be used as interchangeable terms and for a growing absence of any gender analysis in both the policy analysis and resource allocation out-turn.
The commitment to mainstreaming, which underpins the Scottish government's equality strategy, is a commitment to mainstreaming equality, not specifically gender. The ministerial advisory group on budgets is the equality proofing budget and policy advisory group and not the gender budget group.
I should note at this point as well that the equality strategy of the Scottish Government is due to be reviewed this year, and we are hoping to see a renewed and reinvigorated commitment, and especially some action flowing from that equality strategy.
Another important point to note, and a point of distinction between the Scottish and Canadian experiences, is that the Scottish Parliament has the power to levy taxation within restricted parameters, but it has not done so. So the budget that the Scottish Parliament and the Scottish Government are concerned with is the expression of the government's spending commitments against its policy priorities, as there is no tax collection or other fiscal activity within it. Funding for Scotland comes to the Scottish Government from the U.K. government at Westminster, and that is where tax, benefits, and other receipt functions currently and continue to reside.
This is a crucial part of what we call the devolution settlement, and subsequently one that is yet again being revisited within the whole question of how devolved government is working in Scotland.
I'll speed up through some of the things the Scottish Government's budget group has been involved in. As I've said, we consistently comment on Scottish Government spending plans and budget proposals, and these responses are available on our website at swb.org.uk. We make specific recommendations on individual and policy program proposals and more general recommendations on the core approach to adopting gender budget analysis.
Specific pieces of work have been commissioned by the Scottish Government over the period in response to targeted lobbying and analysis by the Women's Budget Group. These include “Understanding the Scottish Budget”, a research project early in the life of the Scottish Parliament, conducted by Ailsa McKay, sitting beside me, and Rona Fitzgerald, to track the newly introduced budgetary process. Subsequently there were pilot studies on gender budget analysis in smoking cessation and women's access to sport. Both of these studies are available from the Scottish Government website.
In response to SWBG pressure and focus on the budget process and documentation, several changes have come and gone from the budget documents, including equality statements within the spending plan proposals and the budget itself and a restatement by the Scottish Government in 2003 of its commitment to equality proofing in the budget process. That was in its one and only annual report on progress against the equality strategy. So in common with many gender budget initiatives and many women's lobbying groups, we seem to take one step forward and several more back are forced upon us.
As a lobby group, the Scottish Women's Budget Group seems to punch above its weight, is the phrase that is used. We are seen as an independent and authoritative credible voice. We have been consistent in the quality and approach of our analysis, and that we are independent from government or other institutions has helped protect our autonomy. However, as an unfunded, unconstituted entity relying on the entirely voluntary contributions of a small core membership, we're vulnerable. Sustaining a growing volume of work against a backdrop of receding commitment to gender equality is a significant challenge.
We have in our lifetime secured pockets of funding, and we have employed, at times, temporarily, part-time development and parliamentary liaison officers. We have produced publications and so on.
We'll conclude with a note on our international connections. One of the main levers behind the creation of the Scottish Women's Budget Group was learning from abroad. In fact, the first public event of the Scottish Women's Budget Group included representatives from the Canadian government—in 2000, I think. SWBG has retained these international links, and members are closely involved in the emerging European gender budget network.
I'll stop now and hand over to Ailsa McKay, who will present the specific activities with the equal opportunities committee of the Scottish Parliament and the challenges facing both the Scottish Women's Budget Group and the future of gender-sensitive budgeting in Scotland.
Thank you.