Threads / Adult Social Care Reform / Local authorities are buckling under the strain of the cost…
Committee Material Published 5 May 2025 ↗ View on Parliament

Local authorities are buckling under the strain of the costs of providing adult social care. The current system is unsustainable. Failure to reform adult social care, especially the funding structure, comes at a significant cost to local authorities. The increasingly high proportion of spending on adult social care is crowding out spending on other services, such as fixing potholes, keeping libraries open and providing youth services, forcing many to provide only the bare minimum to residents...

Local authorities are buckling under the strain of the costs of providing adult social care. The current system is unsustainable. Failure to reform adult social care, especially the funding structure, comes at a significant cost to local authorities. The increasingly high proportion of spending on adult social care is crowding out spending on other services, such as fixing potholes, keeping libraries open and providing youth services, forcing many to provide only the bare minimum to residents. It is also preventing councils from reducing future demand for adult social care through investment in prevention activities. There is a growing discon Type: conclusion | Number: 8 | Response status: under_consideration Government response: The government strongly agrees that adult social care plays an important enabling role in supporting economic growth, particularly through its impact on employment and regional development. The sector contributes around 2% of GDP, employs 1.59 million people