Statistics

This is the latest edition of a document which provides the essential facts on the Civil Service today; outlining its changing size, composition, capability and performance.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) publishes a report every year on statistics about the profile of civil servants. It also publishes headline numbers of how many people work in the Civil Service every quarter.

Here are some key statistics about the Civil Service.

Civil Service employment since 1902

Employment since 1902 (small)

This chart shows how employment levels have evolved since 1902. Figures are based on the numbers of full-time equivalent (FTE) civil servants. Employment reached a peak in 1944. Since then there has been a long-term downwards trend.

Sources:
1902 to 1990 – Mandate and Departmental returns, Civil Service Statistics
1991 to 1998 – Public Sector Employment Statistics, ONS
1999 to 2010 – Quarterly Public Sector Employment Statistics, ONS

Key dates

The following list gives the numbers of FTE civil servants at key dates during the last 100 years. 

  • 1918, end of WW1 – 221,000
  • 1939,  start of WW11 – 347,000
  • 1944, highest ever number – 1,160,000
  • 1945, the number stood at – 1,100,000
  • 1977, the highest number in the last 35 years – 746,000
  • First quarter 1999, the lowest recorded number post WW11 – 478,000
  • Second quarter 2005, Her Majesty’s Court Service (HMCS) transfer – 536,000
  • First Quarter 2010,  current position –  493,000  
Where civil servants work

In the last 20 years, the proportion of civil servants located in London and the South East has reduced from 37.6% to 26.6%.

Sources:
Public Sector Employment Statistics, ONS
Civil Service Statistics, ONS

Almost three-quarters of permanent civil servants work at one of the four
largest departments:

  • DWP – 24.6%
  • HMRC – 16.1%
  • MOD – 15.3%
  • MOJ – 16.3%
  • Other departments – 27.6%
Women in the Civil Service 1991 - 2009

The representation of women has been increasing year on year. Women have made up more than half of civil servants since 2001.

2009 – 53%
1991 – 46%

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Image 7 - Year by year increase of women

Sources:
Public Sector Employment Statistics, ONS

Ethnicity in the Civil Service

The percentage of ethnic minority civil servants has increased by more than half since 1999, to 8.9% in 2009.

Sources:
Civil Service Statistics, ONS

 

People with disabilities in the Civil Service

Since 2001, the percentage of civil servants with disabilities has more than doubled, with the current level being 7.1%.

Sources: 
Civil Service Statistics, ONS
NB 2009 disability figure is as a percentage of all those with a known disability status. Before 2007 it is a percentage of all staff.

Proportion of civil servants who work part-time 1999–2010

Flexible working patterns are increasingly common in the Civil Service. For example, the proportion of civil servants working part-time has increased from just over one in ten in 1999 to just over one in five in 2010.

Sources:
Civil Service Statistics, ONS
Public Sector Employment Statistics, ONS

Age in the Civil Service

The average age of civil servants increased from 40 to 44 between 1999 and 2009.

Sources:
Civil Service Statistics, ONS

Find out more information
To find out more information, view the full Office for National Statistics report [External website].
Statistics reports from 1970

Detailed reports from 1970 onwards are available online in the Statistics archive.

Employment since 1902

Image 1 - Employment totals

Where civil servants work

Image 3 - Departmental Split

Women in the Civil Service

Image 5 - Women Increase