Charity condemns ‘miserly’ failure to raise free care income thresholds set in 2011

A decade of real-terms cuts means the tests deciding who receives state-funded adult care are less generous than nearly a quarter of a century ago, with other cuts leaving some care users more than £1,000 a year worse off, the Observer can reveal.

The government has frozen the thresholds on who qualifies for state-funded care for 11 consecutive years, and the guaranteed minimum income levels for care users are being frozen for the sixth year. Inflation means these are real-terms cuts.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Sex stories, purgatory and Adele’s tears: the album skit is back

Keen to re-establish the album in the age of the playlist, artists…

Fund star James Anderson to quit Scottish Mortgage

A star fund manager who made British investors a fortune by backing…

Biden signs measure to avert shutdown but Ukraine aid remains frozen

Hard-right Republicans ensure chances of more money and weapons for Kyiv hinge…

Judge rejects Trump attempt to toss classified documents case with caveats

Trump’s Presidential Records Act argument could be resurrected at trial even as…