21 December 2023
When will we see the government’s values of ‘community, equality and opportunity’ reflected in investment in social care?
Our CEO Rachel Cackett responds to publication of the 2024-25 Budget
Responding to Tuesday’s announcement of the 2024-25 Budget, Rachel Cackett, CEO of CCPS, said:
“It’s very disappointing to see the social care sector overlooked, under-discussed and lacking in committed investment.
The government says public services need reform to be sustainable, particularly the NHS.
Government needs not-for-profit social care providers to deliver more prevention and early intervention for that to happen.
But to do that, providers need to still be here and to be sustainable.
Announcements yesterday reiterated that the base rate of pay would increase to £12 per hour for care and support staff starting in April 2024.
That means pay for our regulated, trained and largely female workforce will continue to remain unacceptably low in the context of rising living costs, a sector recruitment and retention crisis, and ever-growing demand for social care services.
This budget doesn’t address the current crisis in social care and doesn’t invest for the future.
Tougher budgets mean tougher decisions, but choice is what governs decision-making. And choices reflect the true values of the Scottish Government.
If the Scottish Government wants to be true to its words on ‘community, equality and opportunity’, we must see those values reflected in investment in our sector.
But this isn’t over: there is still time invest in the future of Scotland.
We are calling on the Scottish Government to Rethink To £13 per hour, at least, for social care and support staff as a first step in a timetable to equity.”
CCPS is currently analysing the full budget to assess the real terms impact of the announcement on social care spending across government portfolios.
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