The Scottish Fiscal Commission recently published their long term analysis of Scottish demographics and it's an authoritative and far more complex account of the issue I highlighted in this blog on the falling Scottish fertility rate.
This report however looked at things from both ends of the spectrum, babies not being born is bad enough, but when you combine it with our mortality rate you can see the harsh reality...
Scotland is very slowly and relentlessly dying off.
Over the next 50 years the UK population is expected to decline by 1.2M, 900,000 of which is due to a reduction of those of us in Scotland. Scotland will fall to 7% of the UK.
I won't dwell on immigration in this blog, I've covered that elsewhere (in short Scotland need lots, and lots and lots of bit but Scots don't see it that way), however as the paper clearly notes immigration isn't the issue here. Even upping the assumed levels of net immigration into Scotland won't make any kind of dent into the issue that we are facing.
The report inspired me to look a little deeper. If Scotland is slowly dying off, where is it happening locally?