Hong Kong to cut over 10,000 civil service posts by mid-2027

Hong Kong's Secretary for the Civil Service Ingrid Yeung Ho Poi-yan has vowed to cut more than 10,000 government posts by the end of June 2027, with close to 60 per cent in junior roles and about 3 per cent at senior levels. She described the move as not 'fattening the top but thinning the bottom', briefing legislators on the 2026-27 budget.

Secretary for the Civil Service Ingrid Yeung Ho Poi-yan vowed on Monday to eliminate more than 10,000 posts in the Hong Kong government by the end of June 2027. Speaking at a special Finance Committee meeting, she briefed legislators on her bureau's 2026-27 budget, noting that the civil service has already been trimmed to 188,000 posts overall.

"The reduction in establishment is the most direct way to cut actual expenditure as the financial provisions for personal emoluments allocated to bureaus and departments are calculated based on the number of posts rather than headcounts," Yeung said. "With the reduction in establishment, the provisions allocated to them will be directly reduced."

Yeung described the cuts as not "fattening the top but thinning the bottom", explaining they are reasonable given the preponderance of frontline staff in the workforce. Close to 60 per cent of the reductions will target junior roles, with about 3 per cent affecting senior levels.

The move aligns with efforts to control public spending under the current administration led by Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu.

Articles connexes

Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan presents the 2026 budget at the Legislative Council, highlighting AI and infrastructure investments amid fiscal surplus charts and public criticism over no cash handouts.
Image générée par IA

Hong Kong budget stresses long-term investments amid public criticism

Rapporté par l'IA Image générée par IA

Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan unveiled the 2026 budget on Wednesday, emphasizing investments in artificial intelligence and infrastructure while facing criticism for the absence of direct cash handouts to residents. The budget projects a surplus and includes a rare transfer from the Exchange Fund.

The chairman of Hong Kong's Federation of Civil Service Unions has warned that tighter disciplinary rules risk becoming excessive amid efforts to address underperforming staff. The Civil Service Bureau plans to revise regulations this year, including stricter rules on withholding salaries during suspensions and confiscating such pay.

Rapporté par l'IA

Hong Kong's government will allocate at least 10 per cent budget increases to innovation and technology, intellectual property, and investment promotion departments in the 2026-27 financial year, despite curbs on recurrent spending. The Environment and Ecology Bureau and public broadcaster face sharp cuts of 70 and 28 per cent, respectively. The Home and Youth Affairs Bureau will expand its civil service workforce by 16 per cent, the largest increase among all departments.

The issue of controlling public sector workforce resurfaces during the 2026 budget review. The Senate revived the principle of not replacing one in two retiring civil servants, a measure started under Nicolas Sarkozy. This longstanding debate on the number of civil servants in France spans political eras.

Rapporté par l'IA

The Department of War cut its civilian workforce by more than 10% in 2025, dropping from 794,538 to 712,677 employees, according to Pentagon data. This reduction, led by Secretary Pete Hegseth under President Donald Trump, aimed to eliminate redundancies and refocus resources on military priorities. The changes emphasized voluntary departures to minimize involuntary separations.

Hong Kong's police commissioner Joe Chow Yat-ming has said national security remains a priority despite the city's stabilising social situation, with plans to ramp up intelligence gathering and education amid lingering threats.

Rapporté par l'IA

Fifteen Hong Kong public primary schools risk closure after being banned from running subsidised Primary One classes next year due to low enrolment, the highest number in recent years. Education Secretary Christine Choi Yuk-lin warned that more closures loom if operators refuse mergers. Primary One allocation participants dropped by 4000 from last year.

 

 

 

Ce site utilise des cookies

Nous utilisons des cookies pour l'analyse afin d'améliorer notre site. Lisez notre politique de confidentialité pour plus d'informations.
Refuser