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Efficiency minister denies proposed Civil Service cuts are a return to austerity

The Prime Minister was understood to have told his Cabinet on Thursday that the service should be slashed by a fifth.

Amy Gibbons
Friday 13 May 2022 09:04 BST
The minister for Government efficiency has rejected suggestions of a return to austerity after Boris Johnson tasked ministers with cutting around 90,000 Civil Service jobs (Oli Scarff/PA)
The minister for Government efficiency has rejected suggestions of a return to austerity after Boris Johnson tasked ministers with cutting around 90,000 Civil Service jobs (Oli Scarff/PA) (PA Wire)

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The minister for Government efficiency has rejected suggestions of a return to austerity after Boris Johnson tasked his Cabinet with cutting around 90,000 Civil Service jobs.

The Prime Minister was understood to have told ministers on Thursday that the service should be slashed by a fifth, as he moved to free up cash for measures to ease the cost-of-living crisis with possible tax cuts.

Jacob Rees-Mogg defended the plan on Friday, saying the job cuts would bring numbers back to 2016 levels after extra staff were brought in to help deal with the pandemic and the ā€œaftermath of Brexitā€.

He told Sky News: ā€œI know it sounds eye-catching but itā€™s just getting back to the civil service we had in 2016 ā€¦ since then, weā€™ve had to take on people for specific tasks.

ā€œSo dealing with the aftermath of Brexit and dealing with Covid, so thereā€™s been a reason for that increase, but weā€™re now trying to get back to normal.ā€

Mr Rees-Mogg, who is also Brexit opportunities minister, said he had seen ā€œduplicationā€ within Government departments, and the axing would mean people were being used ā€œas efficiently as possibleā€.

ā€œWhat Iā€™ve seen within the Cabinet Office, which is where I work and bear in mind each secretary of state will be responsible for his or her own department, is that thereā€™s duplication within Government, so you have a communications department and then you have within another department some people doing communications,ā€ he said.

ā€œSo itā€™s trying to ensure that you use the resources that youā€™ve got rather than duplicating it bit by bit.ā€

Asked why the cuts were not being described as a return to austerity, he said: ā€œI donā€™t think it is because what is being done is getting back to the efficiency levels we had in 2016.ā€

Mr Johnson made the demand during an away day with ministers in Stoke-on-Trent, with the Government coming under intense pressure to ease the pain of soaring prices.

But the FDA civil servantsā€™ union warned the ā€œill-thought-outā€ proposal would not lead to a more cost-effective Government and could have impacts on passport processing, borders and health.

Sources familiar with Boris Johnsonā€™s Cabinet conversation said he told ministers to return the Civil Service to its 2016 levels in the coming years.

It was said its numbers had grown since then to 475,000 full-time equivalent jobs.

The Prime Minister told the Daily Mail: ā€œWe have got to cut the cost of Government to reduce the cost of living.ā€

He suggested the billions saved could be used for tax cuts, saying: ā€œEvery pound the Government pre-empts from the taxpayer is money they can spend on their own priorities, on their own lives.ā€

Sources did not deny that the sweeping cut to public jobs could be used for future tax reductions.

Mr Johnson wants a recruitment freeze across Whitehall to start soon, with the abolition of any vacancies unless they are signed off by ministers.

Ministers are expected to report back within a month with plans for achieving the cuts from their departments.

Dave Penman, general secretary of the FDA, accused the Government of ā€œpicking a number out of the airā€ when setting its target for Civil Service staffing, and said the plans to return to 2016 levels were ā€œunrealisticā€.

He told BBC Radio 4ā€™s Today programme that part of a civil servantā€™s job is to ā€œthink of how we do things more efficientlyā€, and they have already committed to 5% cuts in their budgets as part of the spending review.

ā€œIf youā€™re going to just simply pluck a figure out of the air and say itā€™s now 90,000 (jobs to be cut) because thereā€™s a convenient point in time where we liked the number, thatā€™s not a serious way to look at what does a Government want to do and how can it deliver that in the most effective and efficient way,ā€ he said.

Mr Penman pointed out that since 2016 the country has navigated both Brexit and a pandemic, and the increase in Civil Service staff ā€œhas been undeniably related to those two eventsā€.

Through Brexit and then the pandemic we have never been more reliant in peace time on our Civil Service

Mike Clancy

ā€œSo unless weā€™re undoing Brexit and can undo the pandemic itā€™s unclear what exactly the Government means by this,ā€ he said.

ā€œThe Government can decide what size it wants for the Civil Service but it also has to say what theyā€™re going to stop doing if theyā€™re going to have cuts of this sort of magnitude.ā€

He added: ā€œIn 2016, the civil service was at its lowest point since the Second World War.

ā€œIt had already delivered huge numbers of efficiencies at that point, so the idea you are just going to squeeze those kinds of savings again is just unrealistic.ā€

Labour accused the Government of letting working people down through ā€œpointless rhetoric and lack of actionā€.

Mike Clancy, general secretary of the Prospect union, said the proposal represented ā€œan outrageous act of vandalism on our public servicesā€.

ā€œThrough Brexit and then the pandemic we have never been more reliant in peace time on our Civil Service,ā€ he said.

ā€œOur members are highly skilled and there is a real risk to Government delivery from losing their vital expertise.

ā€œThey are vital to what the Government want to do, whether that is levelling up or pandemic recovery. For them, these cuts to jobs come on the back of significant real terms cuts in pay.

ā€œThe big cuts to public services since 2010 have often proved an expensive error ā€“ these proposals risk doubling down on the mistake.ā€

A Government spokeswoman said ā€œthe public rightly expect their Government to lead by example and run as efficiently as possibleā€ as the nation faces rising costs.

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