Welfare effects of social care policies
Authors
Justin van de Ven, Patryk Bronka, Matteo Richiardi
Publication Date
Mar 2025
Abstract
One challenge presented by population aging is how to adjust public support for social care in a way that achieves desired quality of life outcomes without compromising budget sustainability. This study uses best-practice methods of economic analysis to explore projections for care and related public policy between 2020 and 2070 in the United Kingdom (UK). The UK is an interesting case study, as diverse social care provisions are adopted in the four constituent countries. Projections indicate that the number of people in need of care will approximately double over the prospective half century, with informal carers playing a key role in meeting the growing burden. Policy counterfactuals contrast the budgetary implications of closing the social care gap, particularly in England and Northern Ireland, and of easing poverty among informal carers
Publication type
CeMPA Working Paper Series
Series Number
CEMPA5/25
Research areas
Family and gender, Health and wellbeing, Population changes and labour market dynamics, Tax and benefit systems
Links
https://www.iser.essex.ac.uk/research/publications/working-papers/cempa/cempa5-25
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Cid:588564