Friday 13 April 2012


Scottish independence: It’ll Cost You

THE ECONOMIST: Scottish independence would come at a high price

IN 1698 the nobles and landowners of the Kingdom of Scotland tried to elevate their country to a world trading nation by colonising the isthmus of Panama. The Darien scheme failed and nearly bankrupted the country. Within a decade Scotland had signed an Act of Union with England to create the United Kingdom of Great Britain. Scots found it tough in the 18th century to be a small nation in a globalising world. But nationalists are an optimistic bunch, and they would dearly like to have another go.

In two years’ time the people of Scotland will be asked whether they want to become an independent sovereign state. It is not often that a 300-year-old union is broken, so the vote will have ramifications far beyond a land of 5m people. Scottish independence could lead to a break-up of the United Kingdom. The Catalans, among other disaffected European groups, see Scottish independence as a harbinger of their own bid for nationhood. Other diverse nation-states watch, and worry. » | From Print Edition | Leaders | Saturday, April 14, 2012

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Salmond attacks magazine that called Scotland 'Skintland': First Minister Alex Salmond has said the Economist magazine will ''rue the day'' it published a front cover image likening Scotland to an impoverished nation. ¶ The latest edition uses a map of the country, renamed ''Skintland'', with puns instead of place names such as ''Glasgone'', ''Edinborrow'' and the ''Highinterestlands''. » | Friday, April 13, 2012

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