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The Forum > General Discussion > Australian Public Service - World Champion

Australian Public Service - World Champion

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... or at least on the podium.

This data was so unexpected that I need to cross-check it several times. But it seems that in terms of numbers of public servants per capita of population, Australia is a world leader.

Here are some of the numbers...

USA - 63 public servants per 1000 people.
Japan - 42 / 1000
France - 85 / 1000
Germany - 77 / 1000
Italy 68 / 1000
UK - 115 / 1000
Canada - 105 / 1000

and ...

Australia - 137 / 1000

yea us!

But we were pipped at the post by Russia at 153 / 1000.

Just some explanations and caveats. This includes public servants from all branches of government in each country. So in Australia, US etc it includes Federal, State and Local government employees. Also some statistics aren't directly compatible due to different definitions. For example Russia has large numbers employed in State Owned Enterprises which significantly inflates their numbers.

But overall, the above figures (based primarily on data from the International Labour Organisation and the IMF/ World Bank) give a reasonably fair assessment of the apparent bloating within the various Australian Governments.

And its getting worse. Federal employees have risen by somewhere between 25 and 35% depending on how you do the numbers and the costs of those employees by more than that.

If something can't go on forever, it won't.
Posted by mhaze, Tuesday, 3 March 2026 8:56:19 AM
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Interesting figures, mhaze.

Do you have a breakdown of what's included in the 137 per 1000? For example, does that count teachers, nurses, police, and local government staff, or only administrative civil servants?

Cross-country comparisons can swing quite a bit depending on whether public healthcare and education staff are included. Without that breakdown it's hard to know whether we're looking at service delivery structure or administrative expansion.

If you've got the functional split, that would make the comparison much clearer.
Posted by John Daysh, Wednesday, 4 March 2026 9:03:13 AM
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