
The Health and Social Care Committee has published a new report that explores the problems of England’s social care sector and warns that too much emphasis is put on the cost of change and not enough consideration is given to the human and financial cost of inaction.
MPs state that the UK Government needs to measure the true cost of inaction on social care, to be able to present a robust financial case for reforms of the system. The committee underlines that without this, the Casey Commission reforms will be “doomed to failure”, leaving everyone continuing to suffer under the current “unsustainable system”.
Entitled ‘Adult Social Care Reform: The cost of inaction’, the report cites the lack of official data held by the government relating to social care. The committee believes that the government does not know what the potential monetary benefits of a reformed system might be and cannot assess which social care reform interventions would result in the highest returns.
MPs fear that reforms will continue to be frustrated by concerns about the expense, unless there is a robust understanding at the centre of government of the cost of doing nothing. They warn that ignoring the cost of the status quo would leave people continuing to pay “a high price for a failing system”.
MPs want the government to commission research to fully quantify the cost of continued inaction and call on it to publish data, including an annual assessment of the level of unmet care needs for adults, as well as an annually published official estimate detailing how much delayed discharges are costing the NHS.
The committee’s report sets out how the existing adult social care system is not meeting the needs of the population, and “the government and taxpayers are currently paying £32 billion a year for a broken system”.
MPs highlight that this is despite the enormous contribution by unpaid carers, who provide care worth £184 billion a year, “equivalent to a second NHS”, and who are bearing the highest cost from failures to reform adult social care.
The broken system is also straining local authorities’ budgets with an increasingly high proportion of spending on adult social care, which MPs state is crowding out spending on other services, such as fixing potholes, keeping libraries open, and providing youth services.
The report expresses the committee’s concern that there is a growing disconnect between where council tax revenue is being spent and what services residents expect to see delivered from their council tax – undermining trust in local democracy.
MPs also point to the impact of the status quo on the NHS and say that social care reform is an integral part of NHS reforms and cannot be a separate process. The committee urges Baroness Casey, in her first report, to set out the immediate steps that the government needs to take to ensure the adult social care sector can play its vital part in the three shifts for NHS reform.
Chair of the Health and Social Care Committee, Layla Moran MP, said: “Successive governments have shied away from implementing meaningful reforms to the social care system. But this is an active choice that is no longer tenable.
“We are living with a broken social care system. It is not providing adequate care to the people who need it, it is creating ever increasing costs for local authorities and the NHS, and it is putting unsustainable pressure on unpaid carers, many of whom have to leave work to care for loved ones. Meanwhile, many paid carers are living in poverty and needing state support in the form of Universal Credit.”
The committee’s report highlights the social care sector’s potential to drive economic growth, contribute to regional rebalancing, and increase employment but says that the economy is currently missing out on this potential.
The report finds that every £1 invested in the sector would generate a £1.75 return to the wider economy and that an extra £1 billion spent on social care would create 50,000 jobs across the country.
Stressing the need for reforms, MPs call on the government to produce a growth strategy for the adult social sector care sector and say “the government needs to fundamentally change how it views the social care sector, seeing it as an enabler and talking about it in those terms in the public debate.”
Layla added: “Inaction, and the current state of affairs, are harming those who need care, the people delivering care, the NHS, local government, the Treasury, and the economy.
“But there is another side to the coin. The social care sector is rarely, if ever, discussed as a driver of economic activity, but it has enormous potential to contribute to the government’s wider agenda on economic growth and employment.
“In our inquiry, we heard that an investment of £6.1 billion would provide full economic benefits of £10.7 billion – a return on investment of 175 percent.
“Alongside the strong economic potential of the sector, it is clear that the government has to reform social care, if it is serious about making the NHS fit for the future. While social care is a vital public service in and of itself and should not be valued only for how it supports the NHS, the two systems are inextricably intertwined, and one cannot be reformed without the other.
“In order to achieve this, the government needs solid data. Our inquiry has found that there is currently a severe lack of granular, numerical data on many aspects of the social care system.
“The Department of Health and Social Care needs to commission research on the costs that the NHS and the wider economy are bearing as a result of failures in adult social care. Unless the government measures the true cost of inaction and can make a convincing case to the Treasury, the recommended reforms that come out of the Casey Commission will be doomed to fail.
“We want this report to change the narrative on social care, and to act as a catalyst for building a strong and long-lasting case for reform. It might seem that reforms will be costly and difficult, but continuing with inaction will cost us all more.”
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