The covid-19 pandemic had the effect of raising public awareness of adult social care. It also achieved general support for a tax increase specifically to plug the long- standing funding gap. However, the Government has missed this opportunity. It has done so firstly by allocating the vast majority of the proceeds of its Health and Social Care Levy to the NHS, and secondly by in theory ringfencing what little funding it has allocated to adult social care for reforms rather than for cost press...
The covid-19 pandemic had the effect of raising public awareness of adult social care. It also achieved general support for a tax increase specifically to plug the long- standing funding gap. However, the Government has missed this opportunity. It has done so firstly by allocating the vast majority of the proceeds of its Health and Social Care Levy to the NHS, and secondly by in theory ringfencing what little funding it has allocated to adult social care for reforms rather than for cost pressures. Members of the public are seeing taxes on their payslips going to health and social care, yet we heard the money going to social care “won’t touch Type: conclusion | Number: 5 | Paragraph: 39 | Response status: under_consideration Government response: As announced in the Autumn Statement 2022, we listened to the concerns of local government and took the difficult decision to delay implementation of the planned reforms to the adult social care charging system (known as ‘charging reform’). Al