The impact of staff ceilings on the Australian Public Service
Abstract
Staff ceilings have played a central role in regulating the size
of the Australian Public Service since 1971. They have been in force
throughout 1971-83 apart from two short periods: December 1972-June
1973 and January 1975-June 1975. Prime Minister Gorton imposed
staff ceilings in February 1971 to limit the growth of the Public
Service. The immediate reason was to curtail the public sector spending
to curb inflation. Since then, successive governments, including the
Whitlam-Labor Government, have applied staff ceilings as the principal
measure to limit the Public Service growth. Judging from its influence
on the management of human resources in the public sector and the
consequential developments which have taken place in the Service, the
introduction of staff ceilings can be viewed as one of the most
significant administrative developments in the Australian Public Service
in recent time. Staff ceilings have not only affected the growth of
the Public Service but have also influenced its entire range of activities
and operations. The administrators have been forced to think
in terms of introducing organisational changes in the face of declining
human resources. The rearrangement of priorities has taken place,
although mainly as a consequence of pressure rather than of explicit
decision. Competition amongst the public sector managers for sharing
the limited resources has forced them to think of new management strategies.
From the political standpoint, the staff ceilings have been used
to satisfy an electorate which has increasingly become critical of the
bureaucratic growth in recent years as a result of higher and higher tax burden, rising inflation and increased bureaucratic intervention
and 'intrusion* in their lives. The Whitlam Labor Government used
staff ceilings as a measure to curtail public sector expenditure to
contain inflation whereas the L-NCP coalition Government since
1975 have used staff ceilings as an important tool to reduce the
size of the public sector in line with their philosophy of 'small
government'. Although the Australian Labor Party consistently criticised
the imposition of staff ceilings in the way they have been applied in the
Service by the Fraser Government throughout 1975-83 period, the
Hawke-Labor Government has not abandoned them. They also see some
virtue to control an 'ever-growing government bureaucracy'. All these
factors provided a positive motivation to undertake the present study.
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