Angus Macleod, Scottish Political Editor
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These extraordinary financial times have rendered much else in the world mundane and irrelevant. Not least, the concept of Scottish independence. So much so that, suddenly, even the Nationalists are trying to avoid the subject.
Alex Salmond sounded at best half-hearted on radio yesterday when pressed on how an independent Scotland might fare in these cataclysmic economic times.
He was forced to fall back on vague references to independence having sufficient economic levers to deal with such events. Presumably, he meant levers such as having a central bank available to pump sufficient capital into the Scottish banking system to try to ensure continued liquidity.
That would be fine, except that SNP policy is not to have a Scottish central bank, come independence. The Bank of England would continue to be our central bank. And a “Free Scotland” would, therefore, have to go cap in hand to what would then be a foreign country in the hope of getting us out of a hole.
But if Mr Salmond and the SNP are avoiding for the moment the economic nitty gritty of separation from the United Kingdom, that doesn't mean that the Unionist parties in Scotland should be so backward in coming forward.
While one can lay many errors at the doors of Downing Street over its handling of the crisis in recent weeks - and, no doubt, the SNP will - there is one overriding lesson which is inescapable.
Without our membership of the UK and without the funds available from English as well as Scottish taxpayers, the Scottish banking bailout we have just seen would not have been possible.
In other words, thousands of Scots banking and other jobs would have disappeared, the business sector in Scotland would have been cut to the bone and the Scottish economy would have gone into a tailspin.
The notion that has above all fuelled the rise of the independence movement in Scotland is that being a small country on the fringes of Europe was no barrier to joining the economic elite. The UK, we have been told, has run out of steam and by going it alone, we could usher in a golden Scottish economic age.
That notion looks decidedly specious now that the booms in Ireland and Iceland have turned into horrendous busts. Smallness has not given them any advantage. Indeed, one could argue that it has left them more vulnerable to the global waves crashing down on their economic systems. Would an independent Scotland have been a special case? You decide.
But if Iceland and Ireland are not available to the SNP to make the case for independence, there's always Norway. Mr Salmond spoke yesterday about how the Norwegians were able to weather the storm because of their oil fund.
But even the Norwegians have had to take drastic action to shore up their banks in recent weeks - for the second time in two decades. Growth is slowing to a crawl and the country's credit crisis has seen this one-time Nordic leopard calling on the Fed in Washington to buy out $5billion of toxic banking debt.
The SNP government has a point when it says that Britain's oil riches have not been spent in the wisest possible way in the past and that more should have been saved for a rainy day. But that is entirely different from basing a whole economy on a commodity that only a few weeks ago was priced at about $150 a barrel and has now plummeted towards $90 a barrel, with every expectation that it will go even lower as a worldwide recession looms.
In any case, the first purpose of a Scottish oil fund would be to fund the budget deficit that independence would bring.
The Norwegian oil fund has grown only because many billions of kroner have been diverted from revenue spending over the past ten years. That has been possible thanks to some of the highest personal tax rates and fuel prices in the Western world.
Is that really the way Mr Salmond and the SNP want us to go?

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as an English man previously fondly attached to the notion of a United Kingdom, I've heard many arguments for and against independance for Scotland - my question is why having elected a party who has campaigned for years for independence - why isn't a vote forthcoming? sooner the better in my view
Guy, London,
Without our membership of the UK ....., the Scottish banking bailout we have just seen would not have been possible. Wrong, it wouldn't have been necessary. There's more chance of you changing your name to Leodson than us to avoid the subject of independence. Unionist parties up here are dead, sorry
Vincent McDee, Aberdeen, Scotland
Your comment of Scotland being essentially caught in atidal wave had she been independant at this time is at best flawed. So how exactly are you applying such a notion?! If Scotland had became independant a few weeks before the so-called economic crunch started to bite, or maybe 30 years?!
T A EASSON, LONDON,
had we been independent 30 years ago when the hidden westminster mccrone report mentioned that scotland would be one of the wealthiest countries in europe then this wouldnt even be an issue now. This crunch is the worst that can happen to any country and at the end of it all of them will be ok
karin, glasgow,
Indepenence? Isn't is about time to have a referendum in ENGLAND to see if we want still want them anyway? No guesses as to the answer.
David, Maldon, ENGLAND
Aye right Angus.
Brown nosing again are we with a bit of political Haw Hawing.
willie mac, Arden, Scotland
Oh for gods sake give it a rest.
We Scots have stopped listening to the gloom and doom mongers.
If you're going to try and preserve the Union, try and make a positive case for it.
B Sykes, London,
Articles like this show exactly why we desperately need Scottish independence. Ireland has protected her banks better than Britain and it has nowhere near the same resources we have. The real question is are we Scots uniquely incompetent to rule our own affairs? Mr Macleod thinks we are, I disagree.
Joe Middleton, Edinburgh, Scotland