Funding for social care and the NHS: how much might be needed beyond 2020?

Social care and health care funding will be a crucial issue for the next decade. Beyond 2020/21 the pace of funding growth for the NHS and social care system will need to accelerate, taking a greater share of GDP, if it is to keep pace with the growing and ageing population, rising chronic disease levels, meet public expectations, and fund new technologies and medical advances.

What’s the evidence?

The independent body the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) assesses the long-term financial pressures facing the NHS. The OBR uses an internationally recognised approach for estimating health and care pressures in the long term, which is consistent with our own research. The OBR’s central estimate for health care in the UK shows funding pressures growing by over 4% a year in real terms between 2021/22 and 2026/27. This is higher than their projection for UK economic growth of 2.4% a year.

Current spending commitments run until 2020/21. The next government will need to determine the path of NHS funding beyond this point. In the absence of firm figures the OBR assumes that spending in 2021/22 will be around 6.9% of GDP. We estimate that this is equivalent to a budget for the NHS in England of approximately £127bn. The OBR estimates that UK NHS spending will need to rise from 6.9% of GDP in 2021/22 to at least 7.6% by 2026/27. We estimate that this would mean an extra £31bn for the NHS in England, with a budget of £158bn by 2026/27.

The OBR also estimates that by 2021/22 UK public spending on long-term care will be worth around 1.1% of GDP. We estimate that this is worth £21bn for publicly funded adult social care in England. It then expects cost pressure to grow by an average of around 5% a year, which would see spending rise to 1.3% of GDP by 2026/27, worth an additional £6bn.

Table 2: UK projections of health care and social care spending as a share of GDP

2016/17

2021/22

2026/27

2031/32

Health

7.3%

6.9%

7.6%

8.4%

Long-term care

1.0%

1.1%

1.3%

1.4%

Combined

8.3%

8.0%

8.9%

9.8%

Additional share of GDP for health and care combined for each five-year block

-0.3 percentage points

0.9 percentage points

0.9 percentage points

Source: Office for Budget Responsibility Fiscal Sustainability Report January 2017. (Note: the long-term care projections do not include the announcements of additional funding in the spring budget 2017.)

Growth of this order in health care spending would not mark the UK as a significant outlier for health care spending across Europe. Health care spending rising as a share of GDP is very common for countries with a growing economy. NHS spending has grown from around 2.8% of GDP in 1955/56 to 7.3% of GDP in 2017/18.

Combining all health care spending (including privately funded care), and using an internationally consistent measure of health care funding, which includes much of what is classified to social care, the UK spent 9.9% of GDP on health care in 2015. This broadly matches the average across the 14 other original members of the EU (9.8%), which act as the UK’s best international comparators. The UK’s spend is below Sweden, France, Germany and the Netherlands, which spend around 11% of their GDP on health care, as shown in Figure 8. The UK ranks sixth out of the G7 countries for the proportion of national income devoted to health care – only Italy spends a lower share.

Figure 8: Health care spending as percentage of GDP – How the United Kingdom compared to other G7 countries in 2015


Source: OECD Health Statistics 2016, Frequently Requested Data

What should future governments do?

  • The recent review by the House of Lords' Long-Term Sustainability of the NHS Committee recommended that health care funding beyond 2020 should increase at least in line with the growth of GDP and do so in a predictable way. We would agree. This would mean that with the UK economy expected to grow at an average rate of 2.4% a year in real terms, the budget for the NHS in England would need to increase by at least £16bn to £143bn in 2026/27 and by £33bn to around £160bn in 2031/32 in today’s prices (from an estimated £127bn in 2021/22) – see Figure 9.
  • While this would be a higher growth rate than observed in this century, it would be below the estimate for need from the OBR. If the NHS is to be well equipped to meet the changing demands and expectations that will be placed on it in future, funding would need to increase at least in line with the OBR’s central projections for NHS spending, requiring an extra £31bn in 2026/27 and £68bn in 2031/32, as indicated in Figure 9.
  • As shown in Figure 10, for adult social care to maintain the expected share of GDP from 2021/22, an extra £3bn would be required in 2026/27 and an additional £5bn in 2031/32. Alternatively, rising in line with OBR projected pressures would require an extra £6bn in 2026/27 and an additional £12bn in 2031/32.

Figure 9: Projections of additional funding required for the NHS budget in England (2017/18 prices)


Source: Health Foundation analysis based on Office for Budget Responsibility, fiscal sustainability report 2017

Figure 10: Projections of additional funding required for publicly funded adult social care (2017/18 prices)


Source: Health Foundation analysis based on Office for Budget Responsibility, fiscal sustainability report 2017

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