Whether public servants are planning to leave their current role and how long they’ve been in that role.
Intention to leave
In Te Taunaki Public Service Census 2021, 13% of respondents were actively applying for another role (including secondments), while another 19% were applying for a new role or secondment in the next 12 months. A small number (4%) would like to have liked to have left but didn’t think they could. Overall, 56% of respondents had no immediate plans to leave their current position.
For those who were thinking of leaving their role, most were looking for roles within their own agency (61%). Many were looking at other Public Service departments (53%) or within the public sector (37%). Relatively few were seeking roles outside the sector (37%).
Tenure in role, Public Service and public sector
Te Taunaki 2021 results showed that more than half of Public Service staff had been in their current role for 3 years or less, with nearly 3 in 10 being in their role for less than a year. Around 3 in 10 public servants had been in the same role for more than 5 years.
More than half of the Public Service had been working for less than 10 years in the New Zealand Public Service. A quarter had less than 3 years in the Public Service and just under a third had been in the Public Service for 15 years or more. Tenure in the public sector (which also includes working in other central or local government organisations) had a similar pattern.
On average, public servants who responded to the survey had worked in 2 public sector organisations.
Of those responding to the survey, 9% had entered the Public Service through a formal Early in Career programme (such as a cadetship, an internship or a graduate programme).