At the risk of repeating myself, also, in normal walks of life and employer will say "Sorry <workforce< but the figures this year are not good and you're not getting a payrise. Why this is unthinkable in the public sector, I don't know.
Worse, in the private sector, they might also say "And 10% of you are being made redundant". Doctors don't have to worry about that either.
Honest to god, if I had my career choices all over again, I'd choose the public sector for sure. People rarely get sacked, they earn very good money, get more holidays, get great pensions and get to retire early. And get to moan incessantly about hard done by they are. Oh, and get MBE's and OBE's thrown in as well.
Worth repeating something I posted several weeks ago on Private v Public sector.
My sister recently took a pay off from her company ( acrimoniously as is so often the way in the private sector as you approach 60) after a good, well paid career . She is a very able senior manager. She is financially secure and could retire but didn't feel ready so looked for some part-time work. Took a part time fixed contract position with her local NHS trust in a team looking to improve service delivery, job is talking to stakeholders etc, formulating plans etc .
She imagined the culture would be different from what she is used to and in that regard she hasn't been disappointed....
A few weeks in she was invited to a Team event held a nice local hotel. Spent the day on A " Bridgerton" themed day, making period costumes and then had the opportunity to spend time with a therapy dog to relieve her stress.Now its fair to say these sort of things also happen in the private sector , however what my sister has already learnt was that there was no need for a therapy dog - because there is no stress !
She says there is no jeopardy of losing your job , you would have to kill someone. What for her are the usual rules of do what your paid to do or be fired just doesn't exist.
The ethos apparently is to " Be kind" to one another and it seems that takes precedence over everything else.
No one on her team works full time, all are part time, those who started as full time reduced their hours. Add in to that almost total freedom to work from home as you see fit and the result is that nobody is hardly ever available when you need to speak to them, so everything proceeds at a sclerotic pace .Nothing is done within timeframes, deadlines come and go, every excuse is accepted.Everyone looks busy because everything is a priority, there is no focus.
Her boss recognises her experience and keeps asking for her to give feedback on the efficiency of the team. my sister just avoids it as she says there would be no way of telling her without breaking the relationship because she says the truth is the whole set up actually just functions to provide comfortable employment for its participants and if the whole thing was wound up tomorrow and the team made redundant , it would make no meaningful difference whatsoever. Sadly , she says that they simply would not recognise that fact, they don't get it.
They are not facing any cuts it would seem.
To hear that frontline staff are facing redundancy when this is going on ... shocking.