Cookie Consent by Popupsmart Website

Connecting to LinkedIn...

Difference Between An Accountant And A Bookkeeper 2

News & Social Media

Government scraps £72,500 cap on amount a person can be charged for social care

Posted on 8/12/2017 by

Social Care

Government scraps £72,500 cap on amount a person can be charged for social care

Limit had been due to come into force in 2020 but will now be the subject of a new consultation

The Government has scrapped plans to introduce a £72,500 cap on the amount a person can be charged for social care.

The cap was due to come into effect in 2020 under plans passed by the Coalition Government. It followed the Dilnot Commission, which in 2011 investigated how social care should be funded, recommending limiting the amount that an individual can be forced to pay.

The Commission proposed a cap of £35,000 but Coalition ministers decided the figure should be closer to £75,000. 

However, health minister Jackie Doyle-Price told MPs the plan has now been scrapped, and that a new consultation will take place in the new year.

The question of social care funding became a major issue during the general election campaign earlier this year, after the Conservatives unveiled a controversial plan to force elderly people to sell their home to cover costs. 

The party’s manifesto included no mention of a maximum cap on an individual’s social care costs, but an angry backlash forced them to backtrack and promise to introduce an upper limit, although they refused to say where it would be set.

Addressing MPs on Thursday, Ms Doyle-Price said: "The prime minister has been clear that the consultation will include proposals to place a limit on the care costs individuals face.

"To allow for fuller engagement and development of the approach with reforms to the care system and the way it is paid for considered in the round, we will not be taking forward the previous government's plans to implement a cap on care costs in 2020."

Source: The Independent