Where we are now
There is no single entity with all the levers for change in adult social care. It is a complex system with influence spread across several groups - and that is why we need a strategy. Several bodies own the levers of change in adult social care: national government; local government and integrated care systems (ICSs); care providers; the Care Quality Commission (CQC) and workforce support bodies like ÁÕÀÅÊÓƵ.
Social care is important for people, for communities and for the economy. It enables people to live well and contributes £60 billion to England’s economy each year.
Demographic changes mean that it is likely that the adult social care workforce will need to grow. We are living for longer – and the number of people aged over 65 is expected to grow by almost a third in the next decade. This means we may need 540,000 new social care posts by 2040. The number of people aged 18-64 with a learning disability, mental health need1 or a physical disability is also projected to increase over this period. By the time a person is aged 75, they are 60% more likely to possess two or more significant conditions. This figure increases to 75% for those between the ages of 85 and 89 years old.2
We are in a globally competitive labour market. Demographic changes are happening around the world. Countries we currently recruit from will need to keep more of their own workers – and we may face international competition for our own workers.
We cannot currently attract or keep enough people. In 2023-24, there were 131,000 vacancies on any given day – a vacancy rate of 8.3%, which was around three times the average for the economy. Over a quarter of people leave their jobs in care each year and around a third of them leave the sector altogether. 29% of our workforce – around 440,000 people – are over 55 and could retire in the next decade. Simply put, we don’t have enough people in adult social care today and we are going to need more tomorrow.