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Costs of backing green paper could deter government from legislating

Posted: 30 June 2005 | Subscribe Online


The government may not legislate on the adult green paper's proposals because of costs, Community Care has learned.

A source close to the Department of Health has claimed the government is "anxious about legislating on something it is not able to afford".

But the source added the government was likely to publish a stand-alone adult social care white paper, challenging speculation this would not happen.

The green paper claimed its proposals were cost-neutral, but this assumption has faced a barrage of criticism from across the sector.

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Shortly after taking up his post last month, care services minister Liam Byrne promised to argue for more resources in next year's spending review to implement the reforms.

However, it appears the government seems unwilling to commit itself to significantly increasing resources.

The concerns follow a King's Fund report this week, which gives a damning critique of the "poor" state of care services for older people and urges a significant increase in funding.

It says local authorities and primary care trusts are struggling to meet "all but the highest levels of need" and that increasing numbers of people would have to pay for their own care in the future because of current means-test thresholds.

It urges the government to cover care costs "in part or in full" and adds: "We are not convinced that existing funding will be sufficient to implement the ambitious proposals set out in the green paper."
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Janice Robinson, senior adviser in health and social care at the King's Fund, said: "If the government is going to change adult social care they need to see it is not enough just to empower services users through individual budgets and direct payments. They need to develop and invest in the market."

Robinson said the think-tank's review of funding for older people, headed by Sir Derek Wanless, would build on the report and look in more detail at the "real costs" of the green paper's proposals.

She added that it would "make sense" for any white paper to come out after the Wanless review, expected early next year, to help influence decisions in the run-up to next summer's spending review.


 



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