The “State of the Nation: Global Perspectives” series explored social care systems across countries including England, India, Scotland, Australia, and the Netherlands, as well as global policy perspectives. Despite differences in culture and structure, the series highlighted that social care systems worldwide face similar pressures, such as ageing populations, rising demand, workforce shortages, funding constraints, and evolving family structures. Informal care is increasingly unable to meet needs, creating challenges that no country has fully solved but from which lessons can be drawn.
Many social care systems were designed for a different era, based on assumptions about family roles, employment, and life expectancy that no longer hold. This mismatch has created a gap between existing structures and people’s actual lives, emphasizing that reform may require fundamental rethinking rather than incremental adjustments.
A central theme across the series is that effective care is rooted in relationships. Models that focus on people rather than institutions—through community-based approaches, self-managing teams, or personalized support—tend to achieve better outcomes. Technology can play a supportive role by enhancing connection, independence, and dignity, but it works best when it strengthens human relationships rather than replacing care workers.
The workforce remains the foundation of any social care system. Skilled, compassionate workers are essential, yet many countries face challenges with low pay, limited career progression, and retention. The series underlines that valuing, supporting, and fairly rewarding care work is critical to system effectiveness.
Funding, fairness, and transparency are equally important. Sustainable and transparent financing shapes public trust, understanding, and the ability to have honest conversations about care. Without clarity and fairness in funding, meaningful reform becomes difficult. The series also emphasized shifting from reactive crisis management to preventative approaches, investing in early support to improve outcomes and reduce long-term demand.
Global learning emerged as a key insight, with successful principles adaptable across borders rather than directly transplanted. Countries can learn from each other’s experiences while tailoring approaches to local contexts. As social care faces a turning point, the series suggests that decisions made now will shape systems for decades, highlighting an urgent opportunity for innovation, reform, and sustainable development.







