Cabinet_Secretary_for_Economy_and_Gaelic

Cabinet Secretary for Economy and Gaelic

Cabinet Secretary for Economy and Gaelic

Cabinet position in the Scottish Government


The Cabinet Secretary for Economy and Gaelic is a position in the Scottish cabinet since May 2024.[2] The current Cabinet Secretary is Kate Forbes, who has served since May 2024 alongside her role as Deputy First Minister.

Quick Facts Style, Member of ...

The Cabinet Secretary is supported by the Minister for Business, Richard Lochhead, and the Minister for Employment and Investment, Tom Arthur.

History

The role was first titled Cabinet Secretary for Economy, Jobs and Fair Work, with the initial holder being Keith Brown, who was appointed in May 2016. At its inception, the Cabinet Secretary had responsibilities for the Scottish economy, infrastructure, trade and investment, business, industry, employment, trade unions and energy. The Cabinet Secretary was assisted by the Minister for Business, Innovation and Energy and the Minister for Employability and Training.

The post was abolished in June 2018, with the "economy" part of the brief moving to the Cabinet Secretary for Finance, Economy and Fair Work and the infrastructure responsibilities moving to the Cabinet Secretary for Transport, Infrastructure and Connectivity.[3]

In February 2020, a Cabinet Secretary for Economy, Fair Work and Culture was appointed, taking over many of the responsibilities of the former portfolio, which were thus again held separately from the Finance brief.[4] The role was later once again remerged with the Finance brief to create the Cabinet Secretary for Finance and the Economy, held by Kate Forbes.

Under First Minister Humza Yousaf, Neil Gray was appointed as Wellbeing Economy, Fair Work and Energy Secretary, with the Finance brief again becoming a separate post. Following a reshuffle, Màiri McAllan held the portfolio of Wellbeing Economy, Net Zero and Energy.

In May 2024, John Swinney retitled the role to Economy and Gaelic, and appointed Kate Forbes concurrently with her role of Deputy First Minister of Scotland. McAllan retained the other part of her role as Cabinet Secretary for Net Zero and Energy.[2]

Overview

Responsibilities

The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Economy and Gaelic is responsible for:[5]

  • inter-governmental relations
  • Responsibility for cross-government delivery & outcomes
  • National Performance Framework
  • Historical Abuse Inquiry
  • Redress
  • Covid Inquiries
  • Sheku Bayoh public inquiry
  • Languages, including Gaelic, Scots and BSL
  • economic policy and prosperity
  • green industrial strategy (jointly with Cabinet Secretary for Net Zero and Energy)
  • support for business, industry and manufacturing
  • long-term labour market strategy
  • enterprise agencies
  • Scottish National Investment Bank
  • Office of the Chief Economic Adviser
  • entrepreneurship
  • engagement with UK government on shared prosperity fund, evelling up fund, ESIF

Infrastructure investment

  • regional economic partnerships
  • Clyde Mission
  • city and regional growth deals
  • government investments (Prestwick, Fergusons, BiFab)

Public bodies

The following public bodies report to the Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Economy and Gaelic:[5]

List of Economy Secretaries

As is typical of Scottish government roles, the Economy portfolio has gone through many iterations since its inception. The current holder is Kate Forbes, who has held the role since May 2024.

More information Name, Portrait ...

References

  1. "MSP salaries". parliament.scot. The Scottish Parliament. 13 May 2024.
  2. "New Scottish Cabinet". www.gov.scot. Retrieved 8 May 2024.
  3. "New Cabinet appointed". Scottish Government. 26 June 2018. Retrieved 27 June 2018.
  4. "Cabinet Appointments". Scottish Government. 17 February 2020. Retrieved 18 February 2020.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Cabinet_Secretary_for_Economy_and_Gaelic, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.