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Public sector employment falls in London

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Public sector employment in London falls by 25,018 since 2009 new GMB study shows

It is not possible to reduce public sector employment on this scale without damaging the vital public services we all rely on for a civilised society says GMB London

A new study by GMB of official data shows that between 2009 and 2016 there was a drop of 25,018 in the number of people employed in public sector jobs based in London in the areas covered by the capital's 33 councils. In 2009 there were 762,433 employed in public sector jobs. By 2016 this had dropped to 737,415. This is a drop of 3.3%.

Over the same period the drop in public sector employment in Great Britain was 606,260. In 2009 public sector employment across Great Britain was 5,861,678. By 2016 this figure had dropped to 5,255,418. This is a drop of 10.3%.

The drop in public sector employment in Bromley was 32.2% between 2009 and 2016. This was the biggest drop in the region. It was followed by Hammersmith and Fulham where the drop was -27.4%, followed by Islington -27.1%, Kingston upon Thames -24.5%, Croydon -16.7%, and Merton 16.2%.

The figures covering the 33 councils are set out in the table below, ranked by the highest percentage drop since 2009. This is from a new study by GMB London Region of official data from the Office of National Statistics (ONS) for 33 councils in London. It compares public sector employment numbers in 2009 and 2016, followed by the changes in numbers and in percentages. [See notes to editors for sources and definitions.]

 

Business Register and Employment Survey

 

ONS Crown Copyright Reserved

   

2009 data excludes units registered for PAYE only

 

Public sector Employees

     
         
 

2009

2016

change

% change

Great Britain

5,861,678

5,255,418

-606,260

-10.3

England

4,852,497

4,339,519

-512,978

-10.6

         

London

762,433

737,415

-25,018

-3.3

         

Bromley

20,600

13,963

-6,637

-32.2

Hammersmith and Fulham

27,967

20,313

-7,654

-27.4

Islington

33,758

24,605

-9,153

-27.1

Kingston upon Thames

15,162

11,444

-3,718

-24.5

Croydon

27,971

23,295

-4,676

-16.7

Merton

10,311

8,640

-1,671

-16.2

Haringey

14,936

12,519

-2,417

-16.2

Barnet

25,987

21,845

-4,142

-15.9

Bexley

12,760

10,851

-1,909

-15.0

Kensington and Chelsea

21,297

18,351

-2,946

-13.8

Lewisham

17,727

15,359

-2,368

-13.4

Redbridge

18,083

16,007

-2,076

-11.5

Enfield

23,130

20,820

-2,310

-10.0

Sutton

15,088

13,628

-1,460

-9.7

Harrow

12,062

11,040

-1,022

-8.5

Richmond upon Thames

10,593

9,968

-625

-5.9

City of London

18,304

17,543

-761

-4.2

Hounslow

17,491

17,015

-476

-2.7

Newham

24,119

23,645

-474

-2.0

Greenwich

20,726

20,397

-329

-1.6

Wandsworth

25,309

25,115

-194

-0.8

Havering

16,524

16,493

-31

-0.2

Westminster

91,166

92,140

974

1.1

Lambeth

34,651

35,316

665

1.9

Ealing

17,793

18,232

439

2.5

Waltham Forest

14,115

14,469

354

2.5

Hackney

17,637

18,874

1,237

7.0

Hillingdon

20,781

22,797

2,016

9.7

Tower Hamlets

38,558

43,354

4,796

12.4

Barking and Dagenham

9,187

10,466

1,279

13.9

Camden

38,602

46,067

7,465

19.3

Brent

17,985

21,820

3,835

21.3

Southwark

31,615

40,545

8,930

28.2

 

 

Warren Kenny, GMB Regional Secretary, said:

"Public sector employment has fallen by 25,018 in London as part of a fall of 606,260 overall across Great Britain. 

 

“It is not possible to reduce public sector employment on this scale without damaging the vital public services we all rely on for a civilised society. 

 

“Law enforcement and police, armed services, further education, social and children's services, social care, environment services, parks and libraries, social welfare, transport infrastructure, refuse and street cleaning and all aspects of public administration have all been subjected to often quite savage cuts.

 

“It is high time to stop now with further cuts. GMB does accept that the public sector deficit should be eliminated. The proper way to do this is to increase the tax base so as to afford the vital public services we all rely on for a civilised society. A good place to start would be with the Panama Papers and the Paradise Papers that shows tax avoidance by the wealthy on an industrial scale. Another would be a system of corporate taxes that can't be avoided by transfer pricing and tax havens.”

 

ENDS

 

Contact: Dave Powell 07710 631 349 or Keith Williams 07710 631 339 or GMB Press Office 07970 114 762

 

Notes to Editors

 

1) Source: Office for National Statistics, Nomis. Business register and employment survey public / private sector.

 

2) 2009 data excludes units registered for PAYE only but this has minimal impact on the public sector.

 

3) This is an employer survey of the number of jobs held by employees. The survey records a job at the location of an employees workplace.

 

4) When looking at changes in the number of employees in the public and private sectors, it is worth noting that these estimates can be distorted as a result of changes to the public or private designation of large businesses. For example, the transport and storage (including postal) industry in the public sector declined in 2014 due to the privatisation of the Royal Mail. Similarly, the finance and insurance industry in the public sector declined in 2014 due to the return to the private sector of one of the major banks brought into public ownership in 2008.