National insurance rises could devastate social care, charities warn
The Guardian|November 02, 2024
Services that support some of England's most vulnerable people have warned that tax increases in the budget will lead to cuts and closures that could devastate the charity sector.
Patrick Butler Kiran Stacey
National insurance rises could devastate social care, charities warn

Although the NHS and councils are in effect protected from the impact of the rise in employers' national insurance contributions (NICs) announced in Wednesday's budget, charities that provide services say the increase means they will face "existential" financial pressures.

Family doctors and pharmacists - who provide NHS-funded services as private providers - also demanded they be exempted from the £25bn rise, warning that the extra NIC costs would force a reduction in primary care services.

Ministers were under pressure last night to intervene to prevent a financial crisis among charity providers, including those delivering high-cost care to adults with learning disabilities, severe autism, complex needs and severe physical disabilities.

The backlash over NICs has thrown fresh light on the crisis facing social care, which took a back seat in the budget to the NHS. The health service got an extra £22bn, while councils in England received just £600m more to cover both adult and children's social care.

The Liberal Democrat leader, Ed Davey, has called for social care providers to be exempt from the NIC rises, while the Labour backbencher Rachael Maskell called on ministers to consider the impact of the increase on GPs, care providers and hospices.

"We know that these contracted health and care services have been through a lot of financial strain under the last government, and they too need to fix their foundations and build stability for the future," she said.

Kamila Hawthorne, the chair of the Royal College of GPs, called on ministers to protect family doctor services.

This story is from the November 02, 2024 edition of The Guardian.

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This story is from the November 02, 2024 edition of The Guardian.

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