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CIPFA has welcomed a £600m support package for councils providing social care services, and the additional 4% minimum core spending power announced by the government.
However, the association said the funding “still falls short of resolving local councils’ financial and operating issues in the face of growing demand”.
It added that the need for a local government finance model reform still remains.
CIPFA said that it is a “relief that the government is listening to councils regarding the significant social care pressures they are facing, but the devil is in the details”, and that it is “yet another instance of an ad hoc injection of cash, outside of the proposed financial settlement”.
The additional £500m to the social care grant equates to approximately £3.2m per local authority.
According to CIPFA, the extra funding may help some of the worst cuts to social care services, but will “not address the longer-term financial challenge of delivering social care amid a climate of significant and growing demand”.
Iain Murray, CIPFA director of Public Financial Management, said: “While we welcome this extra money, indicating that the government is willing to listen and act on some of the challenges that local government is facing, it is not the much-needed lifeline for many with significant unmet costs.
“Without a sustainable, long-term funding approach, we can still expect a reduction in social care services. If the government is to meet demand and cover the significant growing cost pressures that councils face, long-term funding solutions must be found.”









