New Zealand’s government plans to cut 14% of public sector jobs to slash spending

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The Hindu

New Zealand's government plans to cut 14% of public sector jobs to slash spending

New Zealand's government plans to cut 14% of public sector jobs to slash spending The military, teachers and doctors would be exempt from the job losses; measures would also reduce the number of govt departments and agencies from…

International
May 19, 2026

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New Zealand’s government plans to cut 14% of public sector jobs to slash spending

The military, teachers and doctors would be exempt from the job losses; measures would also reduce the number of govt departments and agencies from the current 39 to an unspecified figure

Updated – May 19, 2026 03:46 pm IST – Wellington

APNew Zealand’s Finance Minister Nicola Willis says the cutbacks would save 2.4 billion New Zealand dollars (US $1.4 billion) during that period.

New Zealand’s Finance Minister Nicola Willis says the cutbacks would save 2.4 billion New Zealand dollars (US $1.4 billion) during that period.
| Photo Credit: AP

New Zealand‘s government will lay off nearly 9,000 workers, amounting to 14% of public sector jobs, by mid-2029 as part of a bid to slash billions in spending, Finance Minister Nicola Willis said on Tuesday (May 19, 2026).

Ms. Willis said her administration would also enact three consecutive years of budget cuts for most public agencies, “significantly reduce” the number of departments, and demand faster uptake of artificial intelligence (AI) technology across the sector. The cutbacks would save 2.4 billion New Zealand dollars (US $1.4 billion) during that period, the Minister told a business audience in New Zealand’s biggest city, Auckland.


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Many public servants live and work in the capital city, Wellington. Their numbers would be cut to 55,000, a drop of 8,700 from December 2025 figures, Ms. Willis said. That would reduce the number of public servants to 1% of New Zealand’s population of 5.3 million people, she added, down from 1.2%.

“That’s unsustainable, it’s unaffordable, and it’s out of step with international trends,” she said on Tuesday (May 19, 2026). The military, teachers and doctors would be among those exempt from the job losses, Ms. Willis said. The measures would also reduce the number of government departments and agencies from the current 39 to an unspecified figure.

The layoffs won’t happen right away, however, and Ms. Willis didn’t detail a plan for deciding who would lose their jobs. Her centre-right government, which has been in power since 2023 and campaigned then on downsizing the public sector, faces a fresh election in November. Unions and opposition political parties decried Tuesday (May 19, 2026)’s announcement.


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“There is no way you can reduce that many people working for our public service without reducing front-line services,” said Labour Party and opposition leader Chris Hipkins. Duane Leo, spokesperson for the union representing thousands of public servants, said the measures were “an act of willful destruction”.

The government, led by the National Party, blames what it says was fiscal recklessness by the previous centre-left administration led by Labour for growing public servant numbers, which increased from 48,000 to 63,000 during Labour’s time in office. In 2018, Labour had revoked a cap on public sector jobs imposed by the last National government, saying that it had prompted ballooning spending on contractors and consultants by agencies avoiding new full-time hires.

Most government agencies will have their funding trimmed by 2% in the government’s budget at the end of May, Ms. Willis said. Cuts of 5% per year would follow for each of the next two years if the government were re-elected. The public sector “hasn’t been keeping pace” with advances in AI and digital technology and would be required to adopt them, Ms. Willis said.

The pledge of public sector cutbacks comes as growth in New Zealand’s economy remains sluggish and Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, who sold himself as a better fiscal manager than his opponents, seeks to show evidence of economic recovery before November’s vote. Mr. Luxon said on Tuesday (May 19, 2026) that the prospect of a more efficient public sector was “exciting”. “The public service is not a make-work function,” he said.

Published – May 19, 2026 03:45 pm IST

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