Author:
KNAPP MARTIN,HARDY BRIAN,FORDER JULIEN
Abstract
The introduction of social care markets was one of the main planks of the
Conservative government's community care reforms of 1990. The
Labour government, whilst emphasising collaboration rather than competition,
has not sought to reverse this policy. What have been the consequences?
We discuss a decade of market-related change under five heads:
purchasers, providers, commissioning, care planning and delivery, and
users and carers. There have been quite substantial changes effected by
social care markets in each domain, in turn generating a number of pertinent
questions for the future success of social care policy in England. One
is the very suitability of market-like arrangements in social care. Another
is whether transaction costs are too high. More generally, are social care
markets structured in a way that will generate the efficiency improvements
that successive governments expect of them? Fourth, to what
extent will price competition damage quality of care? Finally, will commissioning
arrangements mature so as to achieve a better balance
between competitive and collaborative modes of working?
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Public Administration,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Cited by
98 articles.
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