UK Government’s decision to withhold Attendance Allowance funding

I have placed this article back on the front page of our blog as a result of the article written by Joan McAlpine MSP in the Daily Record on Free Personal and Nursing Care.  This is the first time in many months that I have seen the Attendance Allowance issue mentioned.     

My article on the UK Government’s decision to withhold Attendance Allowance funding when the Scottish Parliament introduced its policy of Free Personal and Nursing Care can be found can be found here.  This article was written on 24 August 2011. 

Joan McAlpine’s Daily Record article can be found here.   

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Scotland’s care industry – part 4

In my fourth article in this series I am looking at the UK Government’s decision to withhold Attendance Allowance funding when the then Scottish Executive decided to introduce its policy of Free Personal and Nursing Care (FPNC).

First thing’s first.  What is Attendance Allowance?.  Attendance Allowance is a tax-free benefit.  You may get Attendance Allowance if you’re aged 65 or over and need help with personal care because you’re physically or mentally disabled.

A reminder of what the 2007 Sutherland review of FPNC recommended on this issue:

“Address imbalance in funding streams.  The UK Government should not have withdrawn the Attendance Allowance funding in respect of self-funding clients in care homes, currently amounting to £30 million a year.  That funding should be reinstated in the short-term while longer-term work to re-assess funding streams takes place.”

When researching this issue I also found an interesting article by the economists, Jim and Margaret Cuthbert.  The main point of this article is that the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) and HM Treasury breached their own rules in coming to this decision.  The full article can be found here.

The decision to withhold Attendance Allowance funding appears to have more to do with not understanding that devolution means the power and ability to do things differently.  When you consider the reaction to other proposals such as a local income tax or the devolving of corporation tax powers a pattern appears to be forming.   It is also worth noting that institutions such as DWP and HM Treasury are meant to act for the whole of the UK.

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