£500m funding gap for older people’s social care – and widening
- Thursday, 26 January 2012

Age UK launches Care in Crisis 2012 report highlighting the social care crisis
Age UK’s new Care in Crisis 2012 report shows that this year spending on older people’s social care in England has fallen half a billion pounds short of even maintaining the inadequate levels of provision in place when the Coalition came to power.
In order to maintain the same levels of service as in 2010 our projections show that Government ought to be spending £7.8 billion this year. In fact councils have only budgeted £7.3 billion in the face of substantial reductions in central government funding.
Age UK’s analysis shows that the combined impact of growing demand for services and a £341 million reduction in older people’s social care budgets this financial year – equivalent to a 4.5% cut – has created a £500 million shortfall.
This funding gap comes after several years of stagnating and then decreasing social care spending. Since 2004 the number of people aged over 85, and most likely to need care and support, has increased by over 250,000. The increasing demand, combined with a decrease in real terms spending on social care has created a real funding crisis.
Based on the figures in this report, Age UK projects that, by next year (2012/13) the Government will need to spend £1 billion more than this year just to stop things getting any worse.
The impact of the chronic under funding is felt every day by vulnerable older people who do not receive the care they need. Age UK’s report shows that:
- According to research from the PSSRU, of the two million older people who need care, almost 800,000, nearly 40% – do not receive any formal support
- Age UK analysis shows that councils have cut older people’s social care budgets by £341 million - equivalent to 4.5 per cent cut in real terms (2011-12)
- It is very difficult to track where this year’s cuts (2011/12) are being made, however evidence shows that these cannot be made solelythrough efficiencies. A recent survey of Directors of Adult Social Services by ADASS found that 23 per cent of the savings would be made through service reductions.
- Even before the current social care spending cuts of 4.5 per cent, the total hours of care support purchased by local authorities for older people fell from 2million to 1.85 millionin 2009-10. Since 2009/10, local authorities have faced funding cuts of 28% over four years.
- In 2005, around half of councils provided support to people assessed as having ‘moderate’ care needs but by 2011 the figure had fallen to 18 per cent.
- Charges for care provision are also increasing. In real terms, charges were £150 per year more in 2010-2011 than in 2009-2010 for each older person using local authority services and £360 more than in 2008-2009. With councils increasing fees and charges and abolishing caps which limit the weekly amount any individual is expected to pay, these costs are likely to have increased further in this financial year.
Michelle Mitchell, Charity Director of Age UK said: “Our new figures show a funding gap clearly exists, that it currently stands at £500m, and that it is growing bigger all the time. We need urgent Government action now; otherwise the gap will simply get worse.
“Behind these figures are real older people struggling to cope without the support they need, compromising their dignity and safety on a daily basis. Social care is not a nice to have extra – it is the support that helps older people get out of bed, feed themselves, have a wash, live a life that is more than just an existence.
“We urge all parties to engage openly and constructively in the cross party talks on care to reach a settlement on this issue that guarantees both reform of the legal structure and most importantly the funding to make it work. The Government must not shirk its responsibility to lead the essential reform of the social care system.”
Click here to go to the Age UK website
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