Create a National Care Service and Reform Social Care
Labour · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Labour’s policy “Create a National Care Service and Reform Social Care” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Public finances & the next generation — Hurts
moderate · moderate confidence
Creating a National Care Service involves large and growing public spending commitments that are not yet fully funded, passing a rising bill to future taxpayers. Independent analysts warn that allocated budgets fall well short of what the reforms actually require.
The evidence
- The policy commits to a National Care Service with national standards, a Fair Pay Agreement, and exploration of long-term reforms, but no funded settlement is specified. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “will explore long-term reforms for an ageing population and integration with the NHS”
- Demand from an ageing population alone could cost an additional £8.3bn by 2032/33. — nationalcareforum.org.uk (media) — “meeting the expected growth in demand from an ageing population alone could cost an additional £8.3bn by 2032/33”
- Health and social care spending is projected to reach 49% of all day-to-day public service spending by 2028-29, up from 34% in 2009-10. — resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “by 2028-29, health and social care spending could account for 49% of all day-to-day public service spending, a significant rise from 34% in 2009-10”
- The £500m allocated for the Fair Pay Agreement would only cover approximately 20p per hour extra across the 1.5 million social care workforce — far below what is needed. — nuffieldtrust.org.uk (institutional) — “the £500m allocated for the first FPA in 2028/29, stating it would only cover approximately an extra 20p per hour if distributed across the 1.5 million social care workforce”
- Independent analysts estimate £2.3bn would be needed to raise care worker pay even to the lower NHS pay bands. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “they previously estimated that £2.3bn would be needed to raise care worker pay to at least the NHS Agenda for Change Upper Band 3”
- Social care funding as planned will only be enough to meet rising demand and costs, leaving little room for improving pay or services. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “social care funding "will only have enough to meet rising demand and costs, leaving little room for improving pay or services"”
- The £4bn extra annual funding by 2028/29 will largely come from local council taxpayers rather than central Treasury funds. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “the £4bn extra annual funding by 2028/29 for social care, while better than expected, will largely come from local council taxpayers rather than central Treasury funds”
- The rising share of health and social care spending often comes at the expense of other public services. — resolutionfoundation.org (institutional) — “This rise in health spending often comes at the expense of other public services”
Biggest unknown: Whether the Casey Commission (reporting 2028) will identify a credible long-term funding mechanism, or whether the NCS will add persistently to the structural deficit.
Our reading: The policy creates a major new public service architecture — the National Care Service — with structural cost pressures from an ageing population projected at an additional £8.3bn by 2032/33. Yet the funding envelope announced is materially insufficient: the £500m earmarked for the Fair Pay Agreement would deliver only around 20p per hour across the workforce, against an independently estimated need of £2.3bn to match even the lower NHS pay bands. The broader social care budget, while nominally increased, is assessed as only adequate to meet rising demand — not to fund the reform ambitions stated in the policy. Much of the additional funding is routed through local council tax rather than central Treasury, shifting the burden without resolving the structural gap. The Resolution Foundation projects a long-run trajectory in which health and social care could consume a rising share of public spending (34% in 2009/10 to a projected 49% by 2028/29), often displacing other services. The policy deepens this trajectory without a credible long-term funding plan: the Casey Commission review is not due until 2028, and the full NCS implementation is estimated to run to 2036. This means significant new commitments are being made without a funded settlement, with the balance likely to fall on future taxpayers or future spending cuts elsewhere. The direction is 'worsens' because unfunded or underfunded expansion of structural entitlements worsens the long-run debt path, even if the underlying spending serves a legitimate social need. Confidence is moderate because the full cost depends on Commission recommendations not yet published and all cost figures are projections.
Inequality & fair shares — Helps
minor · low confidence
The policy's Fair Pay Agreement targets one of the UK's poorest-paid workforces, where around one in five workers lives in poverty, so it could narrow the income gap. But independent analysts warn the £500 million allocated is far too small to deliver meaningful pay rises, and extra funding will largely fall on local council taxpayers rather than being drawn from central progressive taxation.
The evidence
- A Fair Pay Agreement will set fair pay, terms and conditions, and training standards for adult social care workers. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “A Fair Pay Agreement in adult social care will set fair pay, terms, conditions, and training standards.”
- Around one in five residential care workers currently lives in poverty. — labourlist.org (media) — “Around one in five residential care workers currently lives in poverty”
- The FPA will include legally binding collective bargaining between employer representatives and unions, covering all adult social care workers. — labourlist.org (media) — “The FPA will oblige employer representatives and unions to negotiate legally binding pay and conditions annually, covering all adult social care workers”
- The first pay increases under the FPA are not expected until 2028. — labourlist.org (media) — “The first pay increases are anticipated to be implemented from 2028”
- The £500 million allocated for the FPA is estimated to cover only around an extra 20p per hour across the 1.5 million social care workforce — far below what is needed for meaningful pay improvement. — nuffieldtrust.org.uk (institutional) — “£500m allocated for the first FPA in 2028/29, stating it would only cover approximately an extra 20p per hour if distributed across the 1.5 million social care workforce”
- Independent analysts estimate that £2.3 billion would be needed to raise care worker pay to at least the lower NHS pay bands. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “They previously estimated that £2.3bn would be needed to raise care worker pay to at least the NHS Agenda for Change Upper Band 3”
- Extra social care funding will largely come from local council taxpayers rather than central Treasury funds. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “the £4bn extra annual funding by 2028/29 for social care, while better than expected, will largely come from local council taxpayers rather than central Treasury funds”
- Social care funding will only be enough to meet rising demand and costs, leaving little room for improving pay or services. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “social care funding "will only have enough to meet rising demand and costs, leaving little room for improving pay or services"”
Biggest unknown: Whether the Fair Pay Agreement is funded adequately enough to deliver real wage gains — analysts estimate £2.3 billion is needed versus £500 million committed — and whether the regressive local council tax funding mechanism offsets any distributional gain.
Our reading: The primary mechanism through which this policy could affect inequality is the Fair Pay Agreement. Adult social care is a heavily low-wage sector — about one in five residential care workers lives in poverty — so a binding, sector-wide pay floor with collective bargaining has genuine potential to lift the bottom of the income distribution. This is a real mechanism with a statutory instrument (legally binding negotiations), not merely an aspiration. On that basis, the direction is 'improves'. However, the magnitude is constrained by two serious problems. First, the £500 million committed for 2028/29 is projected by the Health Foundation and Nuffield Trust — both independent institutional sources — to deliver only around 20p per hour extra across 1.5 million workers, while the sum needed to reach even the lower NHS pay bands is estimated at £2.3 billion. The gap between aspiration and funded delivery is large. Second, the additional funding is expected to come substantially from local council tax rather than central progressive taxation; council tax is a regressive levy (flat-rate, not income-linked), meaning the financing side partially offsets any distributional gain on the worker side. The national standards commitment could modestly reduce regional inequality in care quality, but no quantified distributional evidence is provided for this element. The FPA is not due to deliver until 2028, making the time horizon this-parliament at the earliest, with meaningful effect uncertain. On balance, the direction is a marginal improvement for low-wage workers, but confidence is low given the funding gap and the regressive local financing mechanism.
Healthcare — Mixed picture
moderate · moderate confidence
This policy aims to ease NHS pressures through better hospital discharge and a more stable social care workforce, but independent analysts warn the funding is far too small to deliver meaningful improvements, and full implementation may not arrive until 2036.
The evidence
- The policy commits to a 'home first' principle, local NHS–social care partnerships to improve hospital discharge, a Fair Pay Agreement for social care workers, and national standards for quality. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “Local partnerships between the NHS and social care will improve hospital discharge. A Fair Pay Agreement in adult social care will set fair pay, terms, conditions, and training standards.”
- An estimated 10,000 patients were occupying hospital beds due to delayed discharge in 2021, a problem linked to lack of NHS–social care integration. — pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov (government) — “an estimated 10,000 patients occupying hospital beds due to delayed discharge in 2021”
- The social care system is widely considered to be in crisis, facing underfunding, workforce instability, and inconsistent quality. — vwv.co.uk (media) — “a system widely considered to be in crisis, facing issues of underfunding, workforce instability, and inconsistent quality”
- Around one in five residential care workers currently lives in poverty, indicating deep workforce pay problems. — labourlist.org (media) — “Around one in five residential care workers currently lives in poverty”
- Demand from an ageing population alone could cost an additional £8.3bn by 2032/33. — nationalcareforum.org.uk (media) — “meeting the expected growth in demand from an ageing population alone could cost an additional £8.3bn by 2032/33”
- The 'home first' and hospital discharge partnership approach aligns with Discharge to Assess models shown to reduce hospital stays and improve patient outcomes. — england.nhs.uk (media) — “individuals are discharged home for care assessments, which can reduce hospital stays and improve patient outcomes”
- The Fair Pay Agreement could professionalise the workforce, reduce turnover, and improve care quality — but only with proper funding. — nuffieldtrust.org.uk (institutional) — “The Nuffield Trust supports the FPA as a "radical attempt to reform workforce pay and conditions" but warns that its success hinges on careful design and "proper funding"”
- The £500m allocated for the FPA in 2028/29 would cover only approximately 20p extra per hour across the 1.5 million social care workforce — far below what is needed. — nuffieldtrust.org.uk (institutional) — “£500m allocated for the first FPA in 2028/29, stating it would only cover approximately an extra 20p per hour if distributed across the 1.5 million social care workforce”
- An estimated £2.3bn would be needed to raise care worker pay to at least the lower NHS pay bands. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “£2.3bn would be needed to raise care worker pay to at least the NHS Agenda for Change Upper Band 3 (£13.13 in 2024/25)”
- The Health Foundation assessed Labour's first year and concluded social care 'remains a Cinderella service' with the pace of change described as 'glacial'. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “social care "remains a Cinderella service" and that the pace of change is "glacial," not "transformational"”
- Full implementation of the National Care Service is estimated to take until 2036, with the independent Casey Commission review not due until 2028. — theguardian.com (media) — “the timeline for its full implementation is extensive, estimated up to 2036, with the independent Casey Commission's full review not due until 2028”
- Social care funding will only have enough to meet rising demand and costs, leaving little room for improving pay or services. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “social care funding "will only have enough to meet rising demand and costs, leaving little room for improving pay or services"”
Biggest unknown: Whether the £500m allocated for the Fair Pay Agreement — estimated by the Nuffield Trust and Health Foundation to cover only ~20p extra per hour — will be raised to the £2.3bn needed to actually stabilise the workforce and deliver care capacity gains.
Our reading: The policy contains several elements that, if delivered, would materially improve healthcare access and NHS capacity. The 'home first' principle and NHS–social care discharge partnerships directly target delayed transfers of care — a measurable drag on NHS bed availability (10,000 blocked beds in 2021). Evidence on Discharge to Assess models supports the directional logic. A stabilised, better-paid social care workforce would reduce the workforce churn that currently undermines care capacity and NHS discharge pathways. National standards could reduce the inconsistent quality that leaves patients cycling back into hospital. However, the evidence from the Health Foundation and Nuffield Trust — both credible institutional sources — is clear and consistent: the funding envelope is badly mismatched to the ambition. The £500m FPA allocation amounts to roughly 20p per hour extra, against a need of £2.3bn to reach even lower NHS pay bands. This is not a fringe objection; it is endorsed by multiple independent analysts and the Local Government Association. If pay rises are this marginal, workforce stabilisation — the linchpin of the whole reform — will not materialise. Meanwhile, the full NCS implementation timeline stretches to 2036, and the Health Foundation characterises the pace as 'glacial.' The scrapping of the previous cost-cap reforms signals the persistent political and fiscal difficulty of this agenda. The verdict is therefore mixed: the structural logic is sound and points toward NHS pressure relief (improves), but the funding gap and slow timeline are large enough — and evidenced enough — that delivery of those benefits within any near-term horizon is genuinely uncertain. The improvements are real in direction but conditional on funding uplift that is not currently committed. The worsening side is not that the policy actively damages healthcare, but that it risks consuming political bandwidth without delivering the workforce and capacity gains needed to reduce waiting times and access problems.
Good work & fair pay — Helps
minor · low confidence
The Fair Pay Agreement for social care workers aims to raise pay and improve conditions for around 1.5 million workers, many of whom currently live in poverty — but the £500m allocated is likely far too small to deliver meaningful pay rises, and first increases won't arrive until 2028.
The evidence
- A Fair Pay Agreement will set fair pay, terms, conditions, and training standards for adult social care workers. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “A Fair Pay Agreement in adult social care will set fair pay, terms, conditions, and training standards.”
- Around one in five residential care workers currently lives in poverty. — labourlist.org (media) — “Around one in five residential care workers currently lives in poverty”
- The FPA will require employer representatives and unions to negotiate legally binding pay and conditions annually, covering all adult social care workers. — labourlist.org (media) — “The FPA will oblige employer representatives and unions to negotiate legally binding pay and conditions annually, covering all adult social care workers”
- The first pay increases under the FPA are not anticipated until 2028. — labourlist.org (media) — “The first pay increases are anticipated to be implemented from 2028”
- The £500m allocated for the FPA would only cover approximately an extra 20p per hour across the 1.5 million social care workforce. — nuffieldtrust.org.uk (institutional) — “£500m allocated for the first FPA in 2028/29, stating it would only cover approximately an extra 20p per hour if distributed across the 1.5 million social care workforce”
- Around £2.3bn would be needed to raise care worker pay to at least the lower NHS pay bands. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “they previously estimated that £2.3bn would be needed to raise care worker pay to at least the NHS Agenda for Change Upper Band 3 (£13.13 in 2024/25)”
- The Nuffield Trust supports the FPA as a reform attempt but warns success depends on proper funding, and echoes concerns that £500m is insufficient. — nuffieldtrust.org.uk (institutional) — “The Nuffield Trust supports the FPA as a "radical attempt to reform workforce pay and conditions" but warns that its success hinges on careful design and "proper funding"”
- Social care funding will only be enough to meet rising demand and costs, leaving little room for improving pay or services. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “social care funding "will only have enough to meet rising demand and costs, leaving little room for improving pay or services"”
- The FPA is intended to professionalise the workforce, make the sector more attractive, and reduce high turnover. — vwv.co.uk (media) — “This is intended to professionalise the adult social care workforce, make the sector more attractive, reduce high turnover, and ultimately improve the quality of care”
Biggest unknown: Whether funding will be sufficient to deliver real pay gains: independent analysts say £500m covers only ~20p per hour extra, while meaningful parity with NHS pay would require ~£2.3bn.
Our reading: The policy's most direct effect on O4 is through the Fair Pay Agreement (FPA), which targets roughly 1.5 million adult social care workers — a sector where roughly one in five residential care workers currently lives in poverty. The stated mechanism is sound: collective bargaining with legally binding outcomes should, in principle, lift pay floors and improve conditions. The FPA is also intended to professionalise the workforce and reduce high turnover, which would improve job quality and security. However, the evidence raises serious doubts about whether the policy will deliver meaningful gains at scale within this parliament. First, the timeline is long: first pay increases are not expected until 2028. Second, and more critically, the £500m allocated is assessed by the Nuffield Trust and Health Foundation as sufficient for only approximately 20p per hour extra — far below what would constitute fair pay relative to comparable NHS roles, which would require around £2.3bn. The broader funding envelope for social care is projected only to cover rising demand, leaving little headroom for genuine pay improvement. The direction is nonetheless 'improves' rather than 'negligible' because the FPA is a committed statutory instrument — not a soft aspiration — covering all adult social care workers, and even a modest floor uplift for a sector with high in-work poverty is a real if small improvement. But the magnitude must be 'minor' given credible institutional analysis that the allocated funding is dramatically insufficient, and confidence is low given the gap between stated ambition and funded reality. The counterfactual — absent the FPA, this workforce faces continued wage stagnation and high turnover — means even a small uplift is genuinely additional, but the ceiling of credible effect is much lower than the policy implies.
Security in later life — Mixed picture
moderate · moderate confidence
This policy sets out ambitious reforms to social care — better pay for workers, national standards, and a 'home first' approach — that could genuinely improve care quality and dignity in later life. But credible analysts warn the funding is too thin and the timetable too slow to match the scale of the crisis.
The evidence
- The policy commits to a National Care Service built on national standards, locally delivered with a 'home first' principle. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “Labour will undertake a programme of reform to create a National Care Service, underpinned by national standards and locally delivered with a 'home first' principle”
- A Fair Pay Agreement will set fair pay, terms, conditions, and training standards for adult social care workers. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “A Fair Pay Agreement in adult social care will set fair pay, terms, conditions, and training standards”
- Local NHS-social care partnerships are intended to improve hospital discharge. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “Local partnerships between the NHS and social care will improve hospital discharge”
- The policy commits to guaranteeing residential care residents' rights to see their families. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “The party commits to guaranteeing rights for residential care residents to see families”
- The existing social care system is widely considered to be in crisis, facing underfunding, workforce instability, and inconsistent quality. — vwv.co.uk (media) — “a system widely considered to be in crisis, facing issues of underfunding, workforce instability, and inconsistent quality”
- Approximately 10,000 patients were occupying hospital beds due to delayed discharge in 2021, linked to poor integration between health and social care. — pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov (government) — “an estimated 10,000 patients occupying hospital beds due to delayed discharge in 2021”
- Around one in five residential care workers currently lives in poverty. — labourlist.org (media) — “Around one in five residential care workers currently lives in poverty”
- Meeting rising demand from an ageing population alone could cost an additional £8.3bn by 2032/33. — nationalcareforum.org.uk (media) — “meeting the expected growth in demand from an ageing population alone could cost an additional £8.3bn by 2032/33”
- The Fair Pay Agreement's £500m allocation would cover only approximately an extra 20p per hour if distributed across the 1.5 million social care workforce — far below what is needed. — nuffieldtrust.org.uk (institutional) — “the £500m allocated for the first FPA in 2028/29, stating it would only cover approximately an extra 20p per hour if distributed across the 1.5 million social care workforce”
- Analysts estimate £2.3bn would be needed to raise care worker pay to at least the lower NHS pay bands. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “£2.3bn would be needed to raise care worker pay to at least the NHS Agenda for Change Upper Band 3 (£13.13 in 2024/25)”
- The Health Foundation assessed that social care 'remains a Cinderella service' and the pace of change is 'glacial' after Labour's first year. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “social care "remains a Cinderella service" and that the pace of change is "glacial," not "transformational"”
- The National Care Service's full implementation is estimated to take until 2036, with an independent review not due until 2028. — theguardian.com (media) — “the timeline for its full implementation is extensive, estimated up to 2036, with the independent Casey Commission's full review not due until 2028”
- Social care funding will only be enough to meet rising demand and costs, leaving little room for improving pay or services. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “social care funding "will only have enough to meet rising demand and costs, leaving little room for improving pay or services"”
- The first pay increases under the Fair Pay Agreement are anticipated from 2028. — labourlist.org (media) — “The first pay increases are anticipated to be implemented from 2028”
- The Nuffield Trust supports the FPA as a radical attempt to reform pay but warns success depends on proper funding. — nuffieldtrust.org.uk (institutional) — “supports the FPA as a "radical attempt to reform workforce pay and conditions" but warns that its success hinges on careful design and "proper funding"”
Biggest unknown: Whether the government will fund the reforms adequately — the £500m allocated for the Fair Pay Agreement is estimated to cover only about 20p extra per hour, far short of the £2.3bn analysts say is needed for meaningful pay rises.
Our reading: The policy addresses the three most pressing dimensions of O8: care quality, workforce adequacy, and NHS-social care integration. The 'home first' principle and local NHS partnerships directly target the delayed-discharge problem, which leaves tens of thousands of older people stuck in hospital beds. National standards and guaranteed visiting rights address care quality and dignity. The Fair Pay Agreement is the most structurally important intervention — a chronically low-paid, high-turnover workforce directly degrades care quality and pensioner security. However, the evidence from credible institutional sources (Health Foundation, Nuffield Trust) consistently flags the same fault line: funding is insufficient. The £500m FPA envelope equates to around 20p per hour extra — against an estimated £2.3bn needed for meaningful parity with NHS pay. Without adequate pay, the workforce crisis that underpins poor care quality is unlikely to be resolved. The broader funding envelope is also assessed as only sufficient to meet rising demand, not to improve services. The implementation timeline is a further concern. Full NCS delivery is projected to 2036 and a key independent review not until 2028 — meaning most beneficiaries will see little change within this parliament. The first pay rises also only arrive in 2028. The direction is therefore mixed: the policy's stated direction of travel is clearly positive for later-life security, and the structural reforms (integration, standards, visiting rights) are genuine improvements. But the scale of underfunding and the glacial pace mean near-term impact on older people will be limited, and the flagship workforce reform may not deliver the quality improvement it promises. The magnitude is moderate rather than major because even with the caveats the reforms are more substantive than marginal.
Equal treatment & democratic rights — Helps
minor · low confidence
The policy strengthens a specific right for care home residents — the right to see family — and introduces national standards to reduce unequal care quality across the country. The effect on O9 is real but narrow, and the actual delivery of the visiting-rights guarantee depends on legislation that has not yet passed.
The evidence
- The policy commits to guaranteeing rights for residential care residents to see their families. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “guaranteeing rights for residential care residents to see families”
- New national standards will be introduced to ensure consistent, high-quality care across the country. — labour.org.uk (manifesto) — “New standards will ensure high-quality care and provider responsibility”
- Existing legal rights to family contact under the Human Rights Act 1998, Care Act 2014, and Equality Act 2010 already exist but were not consistently upheld. — leeds.gov.uk (government) — “strengthen the existing legal rights of care home residents, which include the right to contact with family and friends under the Human Rights Act 1998, Care Act 2014, and Equality Act 2010”
- Concerns about denial of family visits were raised during the COVID-19 pandemic. — theguardian.com (media) — “address concerns raised during the COVID-19 pandemic when many residents were denied visits”
- Legislation is sought to grant residents the right to nominate essential visitors. — publications.parliament.uk (government) — “Legislation is sought to grant residents the right to nominate essential visitors, subject to infection control”
- The social care system currently suffers from inconsistent quality, described as widely in crisis. — vwv.co.uk (media) — “facing issues of underfunding, workforce instability, and inconsistent quality”
- National standards are intended to reduce geographic inconsistency in care quality, but the pace of NCS implementation is estimated at up to 2036. — theguardian.com (media) — “timeline for its full implementation is extensive, estimated up to 2036”
Biggest unknown: Whether visiting-rights legislation is actually enacted, and whether national standards are enforceable enough to reduce the existing geographic inequality in care quality.
Our reading: O9 covers equal treatment, minority protections, due process, and rights. Two elements of this policy are directly relevant. First, the commitment to guarantee visiting rights for care home residents addresses a concrete rights failure — during COVID-19, residents (a protected, vulnerable group) were denied contact with family despite existing legal entitlements under the Human Rights Act and Care Act. Legislating an explicit right to nominate essential visitors would close this gap and provide a clearer due-process mechanism. This is a modest but genuine improvement to the enforceable rights of a specific minority group. Second, the introduction of national standards targets the current inconsistency in care quality. Unequal quality depending on geography or provider amounts to unequal treatment for people with the same entitlement — national standards, if enforced, would address this. However, the magnitude must be kept low. The visiting-rights guarantee depends on legislation not yet passed. National standards are aspirational at this stage, and the full NCS implementation timeline extends to 2036. The Health Foundation assessed the pace of change as 'glacial'. Neither mechanism has yet fired at scale. The core rights improvement — visiting rights — is real and evidenced by a demonstrated past failure, but it is narrow in scope (it applies specifically to residential care residents). No evidence is provided that this policy materially affects voting rights, anti-discrimination law more broadly, or due process outside the care context. Direction is therefore 'improves', but magnitude is minor and confidence is low given legislative uncertainty and the extended implementation horizon.