It is encouraging that the Chancellor has announced £1.3 billion of extra funding, through the local government finance settlement, for the next financial year. Together with council tax flexibilities and locally-retained business rates, this will provide a real-terms increase in total core spending power in 2025/26 of around 3.2 per cent. This will help meet some, but not all, of the significant pressures in adult and children’s social care and homelessness support.
Key messages
- It is encouraging that the Chancellor has announced £1.3 billion of extra funding, through the local government finance settlement, for the next financial year. Together with council tax flexibilities and locally-retained business rates, this will provide a real-terms increase in total core spending power in 2025/26 of around 3.2 per cent. This will help meet some, but not all, of the significant pressures in adult and children’s social care and homelessness support.
- Other measures announced in the Budget for our sector, including the Extended Producer Responsibility, special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) uplift, Household Support Fund, Bus Service Improvement Plans funding, local roads maintenance, resource funding for homelessness pressures, and the Kinship Allowance pilot represent over £4.5 billion in additional funding.
- This is a step in the right direction, but councils and the services they provide to their residents still face a precarious short and long-term future. The Government needs to give explicit clarity on whether councils will be protected from extra cost pressures from the increases to employer national insurance contributions.
- Only with greater funding certainty through multi-year settlements and more clarity on financial reform, can councils protect services, meet the needs of residents and work in partnership on the Government's priorities, from social care to housing, inclusive economic growth and tackling climate change. We look forward to continuing to work in partnership with the Government to address these issues for councils and communities.
Background
Funding reform
- We are pleased the Government has acted on our long standing asks and committed to introducing multi-year settlements from 2026/27. We are also pleased that the Government intends to pursue a comprehensive set of reforms to return the sector to a sustainable position. We want to work with Government on these reforms.
- The Government should provide certainty and clarity over financial reforms including the nature of the redistribution of funding, business rates reset, the Fair Funding Review (FFR), and reforms to other grants such as the New Homes Bonus, making sure the sector is properly engaged and consulting on any potential changes in a timely manner.
- We consider that the Government review both the formulae and the underlying data used for the assessment of relative needs and resources. Transitional mechanisms should provide sufficient funding to ensure that no council experiences a loss of income.
- The Government should clarify its plans for, and the timing of, any reset of accumulated business rates growth at the earliest opportunity as part of a broader effort to provide certainty to the sector on planned reform. The Government should introduce a transitional mechanism as part of any reset of accumulated growth, to ensure that local authority services that residents rely on are not put at risk.
Exceptional Financial Support
- The sheer number of councils that have been allowed to capitalise revenue spending under the Exceptional Financial Support scheme demonstrates that there is clearly an ongoing need for additional financial support for some councils.
- Our recent survey of council Chief Executives found that one in four councils in England are likely to have to apply for emergency government agreements to stave off bankruptcy in the next two financial years.
- In our view, there is a risk that the system as currently designed could potentially load struggling councils with further debt and/or undermine future capital programmes by burning through councils’ capital receipts. In this context the Government should assure itself, and councils, that the current Exceptional Financial Support is achieving its objective of supporting councils in returning to financial sustainability in an efficient and effective manner.
National Insurance
- The Government is increasing the rate of employer National Insurance contributions (NICs) from 13.8 per cent to 15 per cent and reducing the per-employee threshold at which employers become liable to pay National Insurance (the Secondary Threshold) from 6 April 2025 to £5,000. The Government needs to give clarity on whether councils will be protected from extra cost pressures from the increases to employer National Insurance contributions for directly employed and contracted out services.
National Living Wage
- The LGA welcomes the increase in the National Living Wage (NLW). However local authorities must be sufficiently funded to meet the additional costs to avoid adding unsustainable additional pressures to local public services.
- Looking beyond 2025/26, local government also needs as much certainty as possible as to what the NLW rate is going to be, in order to plan effectively for any future increases. There is currently too much uncertainty in the process, with Budget’s announcement the latest example of an increase at the higher end of ever-changing projections.
- We strongly urge the Low Pay Commission to put predictability and certainty for employers at the heart of their recommendations to government for the future National Living Wage to enable employers to plan for and manage rises more sustainably.
Health funding
Budget reaction on health funding
- Health is about more than healthcare, and local councils are vital in addressing the wider determinants of health, through their role in housing, green spaces, youth services, and the local economy. They plan, commission and provide essential services like social care, public health and children’s services, all of which are key to improving population health and preventing ill health.
- We are pleased the Government has acted on our call to increase Affordable Homes Programme funding. Ensuring people have good housing can help to delay or reduce a person’s need for health and care services in the future and help them retain their independence, health and wellbeing for longer.
- To effectively reduce pressure on healthcare systems, improve health outcomes and tackle inequalities it is vital to involve local government in shaping the upcoming 10-year plan for health. Reforming social care and investing in local government services are essential for a healthier population and a sustainable NHS. Local government must be integral in developing the solutions.
- Public health grants fund essential local services that help keep communities healthy. LGA analysis has found that, between July 2015 and 2024, the Public Health Grant received by councils has been reduced in real terms by £858 million (in 2022/23 prices). This has resulted in reductions in councils' ability to spend on public health commissioned services.
- Public health teams have faced an unprecedented period of pressures, with funding levels not keeping pace with demand. Sufficient ongoing funding is needed to ensure all local authorities can continue to meet their statutory public health responsibilities. It is vitally important that the Government continues to address challenges which arise over the coming months and years.
- We are disappointed there was no new funding announced for public health and we will continue to make the case for multi-year settlements and for more long-term certainty around public health funding for all councils. An increased focus on prevention through an uplift to the public health grant is urgently needed, as well as a wider review of the adequacy of public health funding. This will support the Government’s wider aims by improving health outcomes, reducing health spending and putting social care and the NHS on a better footing for the long term. In addition, we note that there has been no announcement about supplementary funding for drug and alcohol treatment and recovery services, with current funding due to end in March 2025. The fast-approaching deadline without certainty of an extension is starting to impact on delivery of vital locally led programmes. Vital funding used to engage more individuals into substance use services should be extended to avoid a cliff edge in support for councils and vulnerable residents.
Unpaid carers
- Support for and recognition of unpaid carers – who are the backbone of care – is crucial. Too many of these people are suffering ‘burnout’ and the labour market is losing too many people, especially those in their 50s, who are having to give up work to care. The adult social care system could not survive without the enormous contribution of unpaid carers who provide vital support for thousands of people every day.
- It is estimated that around 16.1 million people have been or are currently an unpaid carer. It is concerning that so many unpaid carers are struggling with their finances and worrying about the future when the economic value of the support they provide is a staggering £162 billion a year. Many councils rely on, and fund, local carers organisations in the voluntary and community sector to communicate to carers. Funding pressures impact on that commissioned support for carers. GPs also have an important role to play in linking carers to their local council.
- Caring can place a real strain on individuals – emotionally, physically and financially. Carers are more likely to suffer depression, anxiety and stress and nearly two-thirds of carers have a long-standing health condition. The impact is often exacerbated by carers being unable to find the time for medical check-ups or treatment. Personal relationships can also suffer and carers are more likely to be socially excluded.
- ADASS’ Spring Survey 2023 found that 91 per cent of Directors of Adult Social Services strongly agreed or agreed that unpaid carers are coming forward with an increased level of need in their local area over the past 12 months. Furthermore, 68 per cent of Directors reported an increase in referrals relating to carer breakdown in 2022/23, an increase from 65 per cent in 2021/22. Directors ranked burnout as the number one reason that has contributed to an increase in carer breakdown over the past year.
- Enabling councils to better support the increasing numbers of unpaid carers should be a crucial part of a long-term and sustainable funding solution for social care. Additional funding will allow councils to support the increasing number of carers with a range of services including to help address specific needs, such as supporting carers of people with dementia, carers from Black and ethnic minority communities and young carers.
Budget reaction: unpaid carers
- The LGA supports the raising of the Carer’s Allowance Weekly Earnings limit to allow those receiving Carer’s Allowance to start work or work more hours.
- The LGA supports the announcement of an independent review into overpayments of Carer’s Allowance. We also support the proposal to carry out further work on the earnings limit. This work should reflect the vital contribution of unpaid carers to supporting people with care needs at home and ensure they are supported to continue in their caring role.
Mental health
Budget reaction: mental health
- The LGA support the investment in new mental health centres. It is important that the centres are delivered in partnership with local authorities.
- There is a clear role for local government to improve the mental health of our communities, ensuring that local, regional, and national NHS partners, the voluntary and community enterprise sector and employers work together with local communities to improve mental health.
- The LGA are calling for sustainable funding for local government statutory and non-statutory mental health services to put them on an equal footing with NHS clinical mental health services.
Mental Health Bill
- The LGA supports the reform of the Mental Health Act and we are pleased this has been included in the King’s Speech. In our submission to the original Mental Health Act White paper in 2021, we supported the emphasis on treating people as individuals as a fundamental principle. We welcome the intention of the Act to address the rising rates of detention and experiences of people from Black, Caribbean and African backgrounds. It is important that the Act reflects the needs of people with lived experience of mental health needs.
- It is essential that the new Act clearly recognises the local leadership role of councils and identifies the roles and responsibilities of councils in respect of both statutory and non-statutory mental health duties, working in partnership with the NHS and local voluntary and community services. At implementation, it needs to reflect the impact of the pandemic which is predicted to cause an increase in new or additional mental health support (COVID-19 and the nation’s mental health).
- We strongly support the proposals to revise the detention criteria to be clearer that autism and learning disabilities are not considered to be mental disorders for this purpose, and the requirement that there must be a probable mental health cause to their behaviour that warrants assessment in hospital. We want to see people with learning disabilities and/or autism receiving personalised care in the community whenever possible. To achieve this, it is important that there is additional funding for councils and partners to support the development of alternative resources for people with autism and learning disabilities in the community.
- The Act will have significant resource implications for councils which need to be fully funded on a long-term basis. The Act needs to reflect the operational needs and resource pressures on local government, and partners, who will need to be resourced to support effective implementation. For many years mental health services at all levels have been reduced despite rising demand.
- We support investment into expanding and transforming mental health services to ensure more people can access the support they need. Investment must also include mental health support delivered by local authorities, as well as NHS services. This is particularly important as statutory local authority adult mental health services are funded from the social care budget.
- We need a system wide focus on early intervention and prevention. Intervening early to prevent mental health problems developing, or to treat and support children’s, parents and families before problems progress is essential.
- The success of the new Act will require the NHS and councils working in partnership. More needs to be done to fully embed mental health into integrated care teams, primary care, urgent and emergency care pathways.
- Commissioning of mental health services should reflect local needs and knowledge; the process should not be overly prescribed by central government. It is important that any crisis Improvement programme makes links with the mental health role of councils, not just the NHS.
- A clear workforce strategy for both the adults and children’s workforce is required. This should look at recruitment and retention of Approved Mental Health Professionals, increasing the workforce in the key pressure areas and in early intervention and prevention spaces and at developing an appropriate training plan for workforce to make sure that mental health is everyone’s business.
- There are clear links between poor mental health and health and racial inequalities. Children from low-income families are four times more likely than those from the wealthiest households to have a serious mental health difficulty by the time they leave primary school. Unemployment and poverty are strongly associated with poorer mental health and a higher risk of death from suicide. And rates of mental health problems can be higher for some black and minority ethnic groups than for White people.
- Councils are key to identifying and addressing the intersectionality between health inequalities, protected characteristics, socioeconomic deprivation and poor mental health, however, resources limit the work that councils can do. The Centre for Mental Health in its Commission for Equality in Mental Health recommended that councils need an urgent funding boost to coordinate action to pursue mental health equality. We need recurrent long-term funding in councils so that children’s, adults and public health services can meet existing, new and unmet demands to combat mental health problems.
Contact
Arian Nemati, Public Affairs and Campaigns Adviser
Email [email protected]