Mithran sets out an overview of the age-old quandary that applies not just to inflation increases but also to funding of social care provision at any time. Unfortunately CB shows another side to this that is far more common, that of (a) privately run much mean profiteering and, (b) failure to see the wood from the trees with the use of clearly emotive language all too typical of council commisioners / funders.
Firstly, if a council has to place someone out of borough it means either (a) that council does not have suitable provision or (b) that council does not have available provision, or (c) a combination of the two.
Secondly, to expect any provider (public or private) to simply accept what a given council wants to offer is a nonsensical position for many reasons.
(a) if provider accepts less than norm from external council B, will not council A (where provision located) want to pay the same amount. Or for that matter other external councils C, D & E? The answer is a definitive yes. To explain lets put some arbitrary figures on the scenario.
Provider has 20 rooms of which the host council pays £100 per week for 13 rooms. 3 other external councils (A, B & C) all have 2 placements also paying £100. Now CB's council comes along and wishes to pay only £90 per week. If, as would happen all other councils would want to follow suit and get 'Best Value' buy paying £90 per week, then the provider is faced with a 10% reduction in aggregate income. What does it do - sack 10% of its staff? Does it seek 10% efficiencies (and in today's context also suffer the double whammy of expenditure costs significantly above RPI for fuel etc as well)?
What CB describes is a common scenario. A council wishes to pay £90 per week yet has either no suitable or available provision in its borough. It then seeks to pay £90 per week elsewhere. Yet if the only suitable and available provision costs £100 then the council has to pay this as it is duty bound by law to find suitable and available provision (and correctly so). Unfortunately, the council because and only because it is private provision tends to use emotive language such as "being held to ransom" etc to cover up its own failings in not having enough suitable or available provision. If the only suitable provision was publicly run and cost £100 would the same emotive language and feeling of 'duress' still be there? I doubt it.
Another way of looking at this is if I need to buy a good or a service very quickly. Do I wait six weeks / two months on a cheaper option or do I pay more for an immediate one? All of us have to make this decision in our everyday lives? If a storm blows off roof tiles or other such emergency we tend to have no option but to pay a premium.
Further to this CB's argument all supposes that the out-of-borough provision must be profiteering as well? Why? Does CB's council have full and accurate figures that detail the actual costs of provision in the out-of-borough home? No. Yet just because it is more expensive per head doesn't (automatically) mean that it is profiteering (whether publicly or privately run). Simple reasons such as economies of scale with the number of rooms or more complex ones that the provision is a specialist one with more specialist / experienced staff may cause higher apparent costs per head.
Moreover, the 'age-old' argument that privately run provision has to make a profit and this must mean it is more expensive than publicly run provision doesnt necessarily follow. A simple question. If councils feel under duress and perceive they are being held to ransom why do they not develop and run their own provision? The answer is often the one councils dont want to admit - That privately run provision is cheaper than council-run provision even after private companies achieve a profit.
I say this from having developed many scores services for providers in the support sector that are publicly and privately run. The cost structure of publicly run provision is far higher than the private sector (that it staff are far more highly paid) and staffing typically accounts for 60 - 80% of costs. Additionally, council run provision is far more conservative in its staffing levels and also in such matters as health and safety - that all again lead to a higher cost base. Moreover, council run provision tends not to cost itself correctly and transparently. For example it relies upon other council departments to provide its printing costs, sorting out its insurances, sorting out is recruitment and its legal issues, yet never incorporates these actual costs transparently.
When full costings are done on a transparent basis by councils - of which I have been involved with - it quickly becomes apparent that privately run provision is significantly cheaper than council run provision. As such these proposed developments are quickly shunned and the figures tend not to come into the public domain. Councils like to perpetuate the perception that private provision must cost more than public provision, and this is a patently false one.
It is not the case that it is a political constraint on provision being run again publicly, it is a financial one. Councils have the legal powers to run provision and if it was cost-effective to do so then surely then would? This alleged political constraint on publicly run services is a nonsense and a stereotypical myth that councils wish to perpetuate (of all political hues). This is not a p[olitical left or right argument.
In summary, I am not an apologist or an advocate for privately run provision - in fact quite the opposite. Yet we all need to get away from emotive and false arguments that private means bad and public means good. At the end of the day we all (unfortunately) have to accept that funding limits means we must get the best we can from a finite pot. Regrettably that means more private provision than the more costly public provision alternative.