The last thing England needs is a set of regions all squabbling with each other over who gets the biggest share of the spoils like primary school children:
I think you counter that, Frank, by giving each regional Assembly Devo-max, just as we are giving Scotland. Each authority has its own tax-raising powers and its own ability to budget expenditure as it wants. Purely for example, (I haven't researched the actual figures, it's the basic principle I'm looking at) you could completely scrap national VAT and replace it with a local sales tax set by and within each of the four regional assemblies, at a rate which can vary within a band of say 10%.
Funding for things such as transport, education, welfare etc., should be on a per-capita basis, not per-capita with more for him and less for her, this place or that place. West Yorkshire should get the same as Westminster, Cornwall the same as Chelsea.
Indeed, there is already an eye-watering difference, for example, in the per-capita amount spent on transport in the North of England compared with London, although I suspect the figures are very much being skewed by Crossrail. There is a cogent argument, however, that London needs a Crossrail project, Leeds and Leamington Spa do not.
That said, I agree with you in principle. From the proceeds of taxes raised nationally,why not indeed have a single per-capita sum remitted to each of the four assemblies, based on respective populations, as a bedrock for each assemblies' financial budget. Straight per-capita and not Barnett-skewed; the Sarf-East would still receive more but based on population alone.
Once we have got an England parliament up and running all four parliaments should look at at a UK parliament, and the none of them should conflate the England parliament and the UK parliament . The UK parliament, from where the UK government is drawn, has to be a separate entity from all four other parliaments within the UK.
Yes absolutely, but surely it's not any great step to then have either (a) four English regional assemblies sitting under the English parliament (not conflated with it, as you say), or (b) simply ditch the concept of an English parliament and have my four regional assemblies standing in its place, each ranking equal alongside Wales, NI and Scotland. The latter would be less bureaucratic and I see no real difference between having 4 and 7.
You may argue it diminishes the English identity as such but then perhaps we want to get away from having an "overarching English identity" comprising 60% of the landmass and 85% of the population, or whatever the actual figures are. It might even help draw the UK closer together....