There are warnings of an 'absolute crisis' in elderly care in the UK.
The ballooning
costs of caring for Britain's ageing population may prompt Theresa May to
support big rises in council tax bills, reports suggest.
It is believed that
the prime minister is heeding warnings of an "absolute crisis" in
social care funding, even though she reportedly stopped Chancellor Phillip
Hammond from addressing the issue in his autumn statement in November.
Martin Green, who
is chief executive of Care England, representing care home providers, warned
that rising demand, cuts to public spending and costs associated with the
national living wage have turned the care system into a "house of
cards".
He told The Times:
"The whole thing could topple over at any moment and those who are poor
and vulnerable will suffer most."
Since March 2016,
at least 250 residential care homes have closed, with 5,000 beds lost over the
past 18 months. The number of days that hospital patients wait on wards for
suitable home-care packages has increased by 224% since 2010, the paper reported.
Chief Inspector for
Social Care Andrea Sutcliffe said: "The system is approaching a tipping
point. We've got increased demand and potentially a restriction on capacity.
Unless we really get to grips with some of these problems ... we will get to an
absolute crisis."
Ex-Chancellor
George Osborne allowed councils to charge the social care precept. It was
initially set at 2%, which adds about £22.39 to an average Band D council tax
bill.
Sajid Javid, the
communities secretary, is expected to give local councils the right to increase
the precept at a faster rate when he announces this year's town hall funding
package. One option is to allow councils to set a precept at whatever level
they choose, which could mean rises of up to 7%, or more than £100 a year.
Concerned about how
politically toxic this could be, one senior Whitehall figure told The Times:
"We know that this isn't going to be enough but it's a first step. Be in
no doubt everyone across government is well aware that this is a major issue
that needs urgent attention."
Labour peer Lord
Lipsey warned that there could be mass closures of care homes: "There is a
danger that poor people in poor areas will end up without care, living a
squalid life. There could be care black spots because the homes that are
reliant on state funding will become unsustainable."
SOURCE: Brendan Cole, International Business Times
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