Title

CHILDREN'S SERVICES

Outsourcing children's care linked to worse outcomes

Children in care are being moved between short-term, unstable placements far away from their families because of a ‘corporate takeover’ of the sector, a study has said.

Children in care are being moved between short-term, unstable placements far away from their families because of a ‘corporate takeover' of the sector, a study has said.

The study of more than 600,000 care records in the decade up to 2022 by a team at Oxford University said the private sector had ‘almost completely taken over children's residential care' over the last three decades as local authorities have been encouraged by successive Governments to outsource services.

It found 17,000 out-of-area placements in England could be attributed to the outsourcing of care to commercial firms and claimed growing private involvement in care provision had led to higher rates of placements breaking down within two years.

CHILDREN'S SERVICES

Why we're losing great foster carers - and what the government should do about it

By Tim Barclay | 08 July 2026

As directors of children's services gather in Manchester this week for the ADCS annual conference, foster carer retention should be at the top of the agenda,...

CHILDREN'S SERVICES

Taking back control

By Sarah Longlands | 01 July 2026

Is Burnham’s vision of the productive state a licence for local government to take back control, asks Sarah Longlands.

CHILDREN'S SERVICES

Government 'stands ready' to rein in private providers' profits

By Ann McGauran | 16 June 2026

The Government is prepared to bring in local profit caps to rein back private providers of children’s placements and temporary housing, communities secretary...

CHILDREN'S SERVICES

Council tax reform: Time to take a long hard look at the Valuation Office

By Simon Kaye | 10 June 2026

Simon Kaye says the public debate should not begin with winners and losers from hypothetical new council tax bands – it should start with the administrative ...

Popular articles by Mark Whitehead