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Committee Material Published 2 Feb 2022 ↗ View on Parliament

When we pressed witnesses about the fragile state of adult social care services and continuing demographic pressure, the Department agreed the demographic pressures from both working-age and older people are quite significant but listed three sources of funding to sustain “business-as-usual social care”. These were rises in council tax (including the adult social care precept), growth in business rates, and a portion of the £1.6 billion of 68 Qq 8 and 38; C&AG’s Report, page 4 69 Qq 66, 88; C...

When we pressed witnesses about the fragile state of adult social care services and continuing demographic pressure, the Department agreed the demographic pressures from both working-age and older people are quite significant but listed three sources of funding to sustain “business-as-usual social care”. These were rises in council tax (including the adult social care precept), growth in business rates, and a portion of the £1.6 billion of 68 Qq 8 and 38; C&AG’s Report, page 4 69 Qq 66, 88; C&AG’s Report, page 4 70 Qq 66, 88; C&AG Report, page 4 71 HM Treasury, Autumn budget and Spending Review 2021, 27 October 2021 72 Q 91; C&AG’s Report, pa Type: conclusion | Number: 20 | Response status: not_addressed Government response: 5.1 The government agrees with the Committee’s recommendation. Recommendation implemented 5.2 The department recognises the pressures on local services and the importance of a sustainable funding platform. To support services, the 2021 Spending Review settlement