Hawke's Bay Today

Smaller ministries cutting deeply

Workforces being halved as budgets feel the blunt axe

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Smaller agencies are making some of the deepest cuts into their workforce, according to RNZ analysis of public sector job losses to date. Nearly 2000 jobs have gone or are set to go, according to ministry documents and the Public Service Associatio­n.

National campaigned on slashing “back-office expenditur­e”. Finance Minister Nicola Willis in December said she wants to reduce public service spending by $1.5 billion annually and has asked agencies to identify savings of either 6.5 or 7.5 per cent.

Cuts have been happening since late 2023 and more announceme­nts are expected. But data to date suggests some of the smaller organisati­ons have been the most affected.

The Ministry for Pacific Peoples is set to lose more than half its full-time roles; including 32 people employed and 31 vacant positions. The Ministry for Culture and Heritage is cutting more than 20 per cent of its 165 fulltime roles and WorkSafe 18 per cent of its 644.

The Productivi­ty Commission is being axed entirely, with more than 20 staff losing their jobs.

The Ministry of Health, with more than 800 full-time staff at the end of 2023, was cutting the equivalent of 17 per cent.

The much larger Department of Internal Affairs (with nearly 3000 staff) confirmed more than 400 of its 455 job losses came from winding up work on national water reform.

The Ministry for Primary Industries, also a large department, was cutting a tenth of its staff, with nearly 400 jobs going.

The Ministry of Education and Oranga Tamariki, with about 4500 and 5000 full-time staff respective­ly, are expected to release informatio­n about their plans this week.

The public service workforce comprised nearly 66,000 full-time staff at the end of 2023, according to workforce data. In the six months prior, the workforce had grown by 4 per cent.

In the five years from 2017 to 2022, the average annual increase was 5 per cent.

Crown entities, such as WorkSafe, Callaghan Innovation, and the National Institute of Water and Atmospheri­c Research (Niwa), were not captured by Public Service Commission workforce data. In contrast to core public service department­s and ministries, Crown entities function at arm’s length from the government.

Minister for Regulation David Seymour has previously indicated up to 7500 jobs could be cut.

Public policy academic Professor Jonathan Boston told RNZ in some cases, the restructur­ing — the most significan­t the country’s public service has experience­d since the 1980s — will go on for “years”.

It remains unclear how some agencies will operate following such big cuts. Without plans being made public, Boston said, “we don’t know exactly what’s being lost.”

From the outside, the approach seemed to be “arbitrary”.

“It’s being done very quickly. In some cases, [bosses] will find they’ve lost staff they didn’t wish to lose.”

With about 45 per cent of public servants based in the Wellington region, there would be repercussi­ons for the private sector as well as the local property market.

 ?? Photo / Jason Oxenham ?? Government department­s are trying to find 6.5 per cent to 7.5 per cent savings in their annual budgets.
Photo / Jason Oxenham Government department­s are trying to find 6.5 per cent to 7.5 per cent savings in their annual budgets.

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