Introduction

A guide to the Bulletin

The Australian Public Service Statistical Bulletin 2007–08 is a statistical overview of APS staffing produced on a financial year basis, as part of the State of the Service series. It provides details of staff employed under the authority of the Public Service Act 1999 (the PS Act). Staff employed in Commonwealth-owned companies, statutory authorities, the Australian Defence Force and government business enterprises who are not employed under the PS Act are not included. State and local government staff are also not included.

The ‘Main Features’ section provides an overview of the report, together with a number of tables and graphs. Later sections cover ongoing and non–ongoing staff in more detail.

Source of data

From July 1999, APSED replaced the Continuous Record of Personnel (CRP) as the source for APS employment statistics. Data held on the CRP was migrated to APSED to form the historical series for ongoing employees.

APSED records information for both ongoing and non-ongoing employees (the CRP held data only for ongoing employees), including staff on leave without pay and other unpaid inoperative staff. Agencies provide data from their HR systems to the Commission on staff movements such as engagements, promotions and separations, as well as a ‘snapshot’ for all staff at 31 January and 30 June each year. This information is used to verify and, where necessary, update APSED data. Although the Commission has tried to ensure data integrity and has undertaken an extensive audit of data provided by agencies, it cannot accept responsibility for inaccuracies in the data supplied.

When referring to the data in this publication, or making comparisons with previous Bulletins, the reader should be aware that there have been changes over time to the the migration of CRP to APSED are explained briefly below and in detail in the Explanatory Notes at Appendix 1.

About the data

A headcount approach underpins the Bulletin—that is, people working part-time are aggregated with people working full-time without weighting.

Time series data reflects the APS as it was at a particular point in time. When comparing trends over time, the data may vary due to coverage changes within the PS Act. For example, in 1999 the Parliamentary agencies ceased to be covered by the PS Act and in 2007–08 the Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority (APVMA) moved into coverage of the PS Act. Administrative changes affecting APS numbers are detailed in Appendixes 4 and 5.

Due to differences in data sources and data definitions, there may be variations between data in this publication and that published by individual agencies. Where proportions are presented, results have been rounded to the first decimal place. Due to this rounding, the percentage results for some tables may not add up exactly to the total shown.

Data for the Senior Executive Service (SES) includes employees grouped with the equivalent SES bands under the Public Service Classification Rules 2000.

Data includes inoperative staff, unless indicated.

Each year, extensive audits and error checking of APSED are undertaken and errors in the historical data are corrected. The following points, therefore, should be taken into consideration when making comparisons between data in this publication and previous publications.

The APSED Internet Interface (APSEDII)

APSEDII provides user friendly, internet based access to APSED data. The interface facilitates workforce planning and benchmarking by allowing users to produce tables similar to those published in this Bulletin. Users can run queries to provide Bulletin-style tables with data about an organisation and, for comparative purposes, about other agencies in that size grouping.

The interface produces charts and tables and also allows users to download the queried results and manipulate the data further in other applications such as Excel. For example, a small agency might be interested to see how its classification distribution by sex compares to other small agencies or it might be interested in comparing its classification by age profile to other agencies. The interface allows the user to make the appropriate selections on the web page then generate the query and any charting or download requirements.

Agencies can also use a secure link to drill down into data for their own agency at a level of detail not available in Commission publications. This feature assists agencies in accessing useful data for workforce planning. For further information about APSEDII, please email apsedii@apsc.gov.au.

APSEDII is available at <https://www.apsedii.gov.au>

APSED services

The Commission can also provide disaggregations and analyses of the data presented here, in formats other than those published, on a fee for service basis. Enquiries or suggestions about this Bulletin, or the analyses and other services we provide, are welcome and should be directed to:

Sue Johnson
02 6202 3579

or

Tracey Quinn
02 6202 3710

HTML and PDF versions of the Bulletin are available from the Commission website at <http://www.apsc.gov.au>

Production team

APSED director: Sue Johnson

APSED manager: David Judge

APSED maintenance: Catherine McLean, Deirdre Murphy, George Debels, Manori Madurapperuma, Marie-Therese Boroczky, Ray Maher, Stephen Burden, Tracey Quinn

APS Statistical Bulletin prepared by: Stephen Burden and Tracey Quinn

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