Pandemic effects on public service employment in Australia

Author:

Colley Linda1,Woods Shelley1,Head Brian2

Affiliation:

1. School of Business and Law, Central Queensland University, Brisbane, AU-QLD, Australia

2. The University of Queensland, Brisbane, AU-QLD, Australia

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic is sending shockwaves through communities and economies, and public servants have risen to the novel policy challenges in uncharted waters. This crisis comes on top of considerable turmoil for public services in recent decades, with public management reforms followed by the global financial crisis (GFC) leading to considerable change to public sector employment relations and a deprivileging of public servants. The research adopts the lens of the ‘public service bargain’ to examine the effects of the pandemic across Australian public services. How did Australian public service jurisdictions approach public employment in 2020, across senior and other cohorts of employees? How did this pandemic response compare to each jurisdictions’ response to the GFC a decade earlier? The research also reflects more broadly of the impact on public sector employment relations and to what extent pandemic responses have altered concepts of the diminished public service bargain or the notion of governments as model employers? JEL Codes J45

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Economics and Econometrics

Reference97 articles.

1. Political transitions: Opportunities to renegotiate the public service bargain

2. Australia and New Zealand School of Government (2020) Renewed importance of public sector and lessons learned from COVID-19: Public service commissioners. Australia and New Zealand school of government, 15 December. Available at: https://www.anzsog.edu.au/resource-library/news-media/renewed-importance-of-public-sector-and-lessons-learned-from-covid-19 (accessed 17 February 2021).

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