Figures released this week show the number of Victorian government employees has jumped by a whopping 60 per cent over the past 15 years.
By comparison, the NSW public service grew by 28 per cent over the same period.
Hmmm … how to explain Victoria’s need for so many more bureaucrats?
It wouldn’t have anything to do with Victoria being under Labor rule for most of that time, would it?
Labor do like to boast about their commitment to providing services. That must be it. The fact that employing lots of people makes their union masters happy is, I’m sure, entirely coincidental.
Except Productivity Commission figures published in The Australian, seem to indicate that the more staff the Victorian Government employ, the worse results long suffering Victorians - who pay their wages - get compared to other states.
In 2021-22 Victoria police has more operational staff per capita than any other state, and yet the rate of physical assaults per 100,000 people in Victoria was 300 higher than in NSW.
The availability of public hospital beds was worse in Victoria than in other states.
And ambulance wait times were a shocker. Only 63 per cent of emergency patients were seen on time, compared to 77 percent in NSW.
So what has Victoria got to show for all these public servants. Apart from world class, non-stop spin from the over staffed premier’s office, I mean.
Education?
Well Victoria’s public schools had a significantly lower student to teacher ratio than other states! So that’s a win, but it didn’t translate into better NAPLAN results. So even when Victorians win, they still lose.
Victoria - the highest number of public servants producing the worst levels of service.
But are we really surprised? This is exactly how socialist ideology works, is it not?
You create a massive state administration that is ideologically committed to the utopian fantasy that the state will create a much fairer and more efficient society than free enterprise.
The reality, however, is that people use the power of the state to create secure, high paying, low accountability jobs with no pressure to be efficient or effective.
What you end up with is a bankrupt state full of very happy, Labor voting public servants. Or, as some like to call it, Argentina.
When Labor Health Minister Mary-Anne Thomas was asked this week to justify the bloated public service she said this …
“Let’s be clear: We saw an increase in our public service composition during the Covid pandemic.
“We make no apologies for putting on the staff that we needed to keep Victorians safe, to ensure that we were delivering support to business and so on.”
Excuse me?
Didn’t Victoria end up with more Covid related deaths than any other State? Victoria delivered, arguably, the worst Covid response in the developed world!
What were all those public servants doing during Covid? I mean, obviously they were taking a wage … unlike small business owners who weren’t allowed to work. And obviously they were doing a lot of internal polling so the government could work out which science was most convenient to follow.
Victoria with a record $178b debt, now has a state payroll it financially can’t afford to service and politically can’t afford to cut. I guess they can always borrow more money.
Australia should be the richest country in the world. Instead we have a growing number of politicians and public servants with barely enough private sector workers and businesses to pay for them not to mention the growing number of welfare recipients they administer.
Lucky the world is buying our coal. Oh hang on, Labor want to stop that too. I wonder if anyone wants to buy a banana.
More govt employees to control, limit and harass everyone else. More red tape to stop everyone else getting on with living productive, useful and enjoyable lives. More like Argentina and poverty stricken communist Russia and China. Yet the voters keep voting them in !
Same old, same old Labor.
Will they never learn?