The Press

REDUNDANCY PAY

- Tom Pullar-Strecker

The silver-lining for thousands of public servants facing the threat or reality of losing their jobs is that the vast majority will be entitled to a redundancy payment.

Overall, these are likely to be more generous than they could expect in the private sector, employment experts say.

Public Service Commission spokespers­on Grahame Armstrong said it didn’t offer agencies advice on what redundancy entitlemen­ts they offered candidates when they hired employees.

“Like all employment provisions, these are conditions set by each employer. They may change over time, reflecting circumstan­ces and employment negotiatio­ns.”

But a Victoria University study estimated that in 2022, about three-quarters of public servants covered by collective employment agreements were entitled to six weeks’ redundancy pay after one year, plus two weeks of pay for every subsequent year of service, on top of their notice period.

Some public sector workers had more generous provisions, such as eight weeks of pay plus four weeks for each year of employment, but those contracts would date back to the 1980s or 1990s, so wouldn’t be common,,

Bridget Clarke, a senior director at recruitmen­t firm Robert Walters, said it was now reasonably common for redundancy payments – including those in the public sector to be capped at six months’ pay.

Employment lawyer Barbara Buckett said that was also her experience but she had seen contracts where redundancy pay had been instead capped at $30,000.

Clarke said there was “really no standardis­ation across the public sector”. “We've seen an example of one large central government agency that has a minimum redundancy package of four months’ pay after one year.”

Another offered only one month’s pay with no recognitio­n for the number of years in service, she said.

Some recognised the contiguous periods of employment staff had at different central government agencies when calculatin­g the service-based component of redundancy packages, rather than only the years they had spent at the last agency that employed them, she said.

But, at the same time, she was not aware of any agencies trying to claw back redundancy pay if staff lost their jobs and then immediatel­y found work at a different department.

The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) reported it paid $6.3m in redundancy entitlemen­ts to 138 staff in its latest cost-cutting round, which equated to $47,000 per worker.

Previous research indicated the cost of public service redundanci­es worked out at $70,200 per worker in 2023 – down from about $97,000 in 2022.

Clarke said redundancy entitlemen­ts in the public sector were typically more generous than in the private sector. “We are hearing some large private-sector employers in Wellington are offering ‘three months’ regardless of tenure.”

Redundancy entitlemen­ts are also simply more common in the public sector, which Buckett said reflected the higher level of unionisati­on.

Even if workers had signed up to an individual employment agreement, its terms would commonly reflect benefits offered in any collective agreement, she added.

That said, Buckett was aware of “one terrible situation” where a union had negotiated away redundancy provisions in a collective agreement with a state-sector employer without the knowledge of staff – some of whom had been there for more than 20 years.

Many private businesses scrapped redundancy entitlemen­ts altogether following the passage of the Employment­s Contracts Act, after which individual employment­s contracts became more common, Buckett said.

Employers had a relatively free hand when deciding what entitlemen­ts to offer people on individual contracts as losing a job through redundancy wasn’t usually high on people’s minds when they were negotiatin­g to start a new role. “The private sector has tended to ‘slash and burn’ redundancy compensati­on,” she said.

That trend accelerate­d in the wake of the gloabl financial crisis in 2008, according to Victoria University’s research. Senior lecturer Stephen Blumenfeld said that also was the era during which the practice of capping redundancy payments became common.

There have been calls for reforms that would mean state-sector employees would not be entitled to redundancy payments if they immediatel­y found work with a different government agency.

But, on the flip-side, workers’ advocates have also suggested redundancy payments should be taxed as if they were a stream of earnings.

That would help ensure people who were made redundant near the end of a tax year – when they had already earned close to a year’s pay – would be less likely to need to pay income tax on their redundancy payment at their highest marginal tax rate.

Blumenfeld said Victoria University was no longer tracking trends in redundancy entitlemen­ts as MBIE – which had been partly funding that research – decided to bring that work in-house after the university’s 2022 study.

But the ministry had decided to axe the unit that research was being transferre­d to as part of its recent cost-cutting.

 ?? ?? Public servants are commonly entitled to six weeks of pay after a year’s employment plus two weeks’ pay for subsequent years of service.
Public servants are commonly entitled to six weeks of pay after a year’s employment plus two weeks’ pay for subsequent years of service.

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