Correction to PQ 95254

Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs written statement – made at on 7 November 2006.

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Photo of Geoff Hoon Geoff Hoon Minister of State (Europe), Foreign & Commonwealth Office

In my reply on 26 October 2006 to the below question from Mr. Clifton-Brown two pages were omitted from the answer (Hansard, column 2071W). I regret this error and now attach the whole reply.

Cotswold:

To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, how many redundancies there were in her Department in each year since 1997; what the cost of such redundancies was in each year; how many temporary staff were employed in each year; and how many staff were seconded by outside organisations to posts within the Department in each year. (95254)

Photo of Geoff Hoon Geoff Hoon Minister of State (Europe), Foreign & Commonwealth Office

The rules governing redundancies are set out by the Cabinet Office and include schemes for Compulsory Early Retirement (CER) for officers over 50 and Compulsory Early Severance (CES) for those under 50.

The annual number of junior/middle management officers in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) who have taken redundancy through the CER or CES schemes for the years 1997 to 2006 are shown below and include efficiency restructuring in FCO Services. Costs shown for the years 1997 to 2001 are the total for all early retirements in each of those years. We could not break these figures down further without incurring disproportionate costs. The costs from 2002 to 2006 cover redundancy packages only.

Numbers Costs (£(1))
1997 23 2,824,767
1998 1 3,314,768
1999 5 3,801,817
2000 7 1,871,688
2001 3 2,825,390
2002 2 198,498
2003 1 173,353
2004 2 68,739
2005 10 1,270,758
2006 17 2,080,925
(1) Estimated Costs

Since 1995, we have given FCO senior management staff the opportunity to volunteer for early retirement on CER or CES terms if they complete a full posting before retirement age or had been unable to find a suitable appointment within the Department. To meet efficiency targets, in particular to reduce substantially the number of staff in the Senior Management Structure, we extended this offer to a wider range of senior officers in September 2004, using funding from the HM Treasury' Efficiency Challenge Fund. The numbers of officers who took early retirement on these terms since 1997 are shown below. As mentioned previously, the costs for 1997 to 2001 are totals covering all early retirements; to provide a further break down would incur disproportionate costs.

Number Costs (£(1))
1997 10 2,824,767
1998 2 3,314,766
1999 2 3,801,817
2000 9 1,871,688
2001 8 2,983,651
2002 7 1,079,194
2003 17 1,905,058
2004 20 2,920,305
2005 35 6,827,231
2006 32 6,042,855
(1)Estimated costs

The number of temporary/agency staff employed annually by the FCO is as follows:

2003 30
2004 41
2005 57
2006 - January 35

The figures listed refer to FCO and FCO Services members of staff on temporary contract whose salary is paid from the FCO pay bill. Officers paid from project or departmental funds have been excluded. Information prior to 2003 has not been included; the research required to collect these data would incur disproportionate costs.

The FCO does not have a central record of the numbers of staff under contract from agencies. To obtain such figures would incur disproportionate costs.

We do not maintain central records of staff working in the FCO on inward secondment. Individual Directorates within the FCO have the authority to recruit and deploy staff on inward secondment to fill knowledge and skills gaps within the organisation.

The FCO considers inward secondments to be loans from organisations other than Government Departments or agencies. Loans from other Government Departments or agencies are known as interchange.

Annotations

Joyce Glasser
Posted on 9 Nov 2006 12:21 pm (Report this annotation)

I find it astounding that the department does not keep records of those employees on secondment or from agencies. The additional cost of such employees should be taken into account especially when people under 50 are being retired at huge cost to the taxpayer. I would like to see a breakdown by age. How many (and the percentage) taking retirement before 65 and how many "early severances" for those under 50. What is early severance? How can people be retiring in their 40s?

Is is disappointing that five years after the EU Directive on Age Equality in Employment and a month after the UK's age regulations came into force with much advance warning, the department still bases redundancies on age criteria. It seems that the way they reduce staff is by age -- offering early and earlier retirement. given that the taxpayer has to fund the final salary pensions of these people for upwards of 30 years after they retire, records should be kept.

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