
Thousands of civil servants have been asked to identify potential areas for further cost cutting in a mass survey across every Government agency.
Running to 21 March, the most recent Public Service Census asked workers if they were working directly in a client-facing role, where their workload was at, and whether they used any flexible working arrangements. It also looked closer at the use of Te Reo in the workplace, and how often public servants were using AI tools to help get the job done.
Staff were told to identify the extent to which their manager 鈥渃ares about delivering good value for taxpayers鈥, on a scale of strongly agree to strongly disagree, with options for 鈥渄on鈥檛 know鈥 and 鈥減refer not to answer鈥.
Workers were then able to rank themselves on the statement 鈥渢he work that I do provides value for taxpayers鈥, with the same scale. The question came alongside another probe into agencies themselves, asking the consensus on whether 鈥渋t is important to me that my agency is careful in how it uses taxpayer money鈥.
Other statements for opinion alluded to the importance of the work an individual public servant does.
Statements which staff were requested to indicate how much they agree or disagree with include 鈥淢y organisation is working for the long-term good of New Zealand,鈥 and 鈥淭he work I do contributes to better outcomes for New Zealand鈥.
The survey comes after thousands of confirmed job cuts in the public sector, many of which were through restructures conducted last year in relation to a Government savings directive.
A number of agencies in the public sector continue to find areas for savings, with some Government departments eyeing-up years of fiscal restraint.
Newly-crowned Public Service Minister Judith Collins has recently given a directive to executives in the public service to 鈥渓eave the acronyms at the door鈥 and show respect to the taxpayer.
A spokesperson for the Public Service Commission said the focus of the census will change each time it is done.
It 鈥渨ill align to shifting priorities within the public service, including what needs to be delivered for the New Zealand public,鈥 the Commission said in a statement.
The agency said the Commissioner, Sir Brian Roche, has been clear about his goal to drive performance across the public service - and to do so, they need to hear from the people working there.
Roche has previously signalled his consideration around potentially axing entire government agencies in a drive for efficiencies.
On the questions itself, the Commission said asking about what changes could help deliver better results is a 鈥渜uestion we should always ask public servants鈥.
Around asking if managers care about value for taxpayers, the Commission said delivering good value was an 鈥渋mportant part of public service鈥.
鈥淭his question is about ensuring we as public servants don鈥檛 lose sight of the fact that we operate using taxpayers money and need to spend it wisely.鈥
The Taxpayers' Union has been applauding the fact the census is asking these types of questions.
Investigations Coordinator Rhys Hurley said it seems like Roche is getting to work, 鈥渢rying to whip some sense of value-for-money into the public service, and not a moment too soon.鈥
鈥淲e鈥檙e very interested in seeing the results but asking bureaucrats if they think their colleagues are delivering good value for taxpayers鈥 money is like getting the foxes to guard the henhouse,鈥 Hurley said.
Public Service Minister Judith Collins was consulted on the census.
Azaria Howell is a multimedia reporter working from Parliament鈥檚 Press Gallery. She joined ob体育接口 in 2022, becoming a Newstalk ob体育接口 political reporter in late 2024, with a keen interest in public service agency reform and government spending.
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