NZ defence forces turning tide on attrition woes

By Ben McKay

April 15, 2024

Judith Collins
New Zealand defence minister Judith Collins. (AAP Image/Joel Carrett)

New Zealand’s defence forces are hopeful they have turned the tide on attrition which threatened to decimate the Kiwi military.

A post-pandemic malaise has seen thousands of NZDF personnel — across the three services of army, navy and air force, and also civilian employees — leave in recent years.

In the two years to January, 3228 people left the NZDF, which had an average headcount of 11,824 at the end of 2023.

The navy suffered the highest turnover, with 17% leaving in the year to January 2023, just ahead of the army, with 16.9%.

Attrition — described by former defence minister Andrew Little as “a big hollowing out” — has hurt the military’s deployment capacity.

A lack of qualified seagoing staff has kept four of the nine-strong Kiwi navy fleet in dock in recent months.

“It’s a real concern that they’re not able to be used,” Defence minister Judith Collins said earlier this year.

“When I have questioned Defence about this, it’s been attrition basically … so what we’ve got to do in defence is to get that attrition rate down, the morale up and then the mojo back on steroids.”

Five months into the job, Collins is seeing progress.

Figures provided to AAP show slowing attrition and this year, and for the first time since COVID-19, growth in overall defence numbers.

The total attrition rate was at 15.5% in the year to January 2023, but sits now at 10.6% – just above the decade-long average of 10%.

That has allowed the NZDF to replace the staff it is losing, with headcount up marginally to 11,867 at the end of February.

“But this is not enough,” Collins said.

“The NZDF is completely dependent on suitably qualified and experienced personnel to deliver for New Zealand, so it is critical that we continue to work to build back our defence force and support our personnel.

“This is an absolute priority for me as minister of defence.”

NZ is far from the only country suffering from high attrition rates in its military, with many developed nations including the UK, Australia and Canada all battling to keep trained servicemen and women in uniform.

The overall numbers also hide particular shortfalls — particularly those with particular technical skills.

Departure of musicians and writers was also running at double the average attrition rates.

Documents released under the Official Information Act showed the key reasons behind departures were opportunities elsewhere and poor remuneration.

The last Labour government moved to bridge the gap between what NZDF personnel were paid and “their market rates” by lifting annual wages for many roles by up to $NZ15,000 ($A13,800).

NZ DEFENCE ATTRITION RATES

Year to January 2023 — overall: 15.5%

Navy 17%, army 16.9%, air force 11.9%, civilian 15.2%.

Year to January 2024 — overall: 11.4%

Navy 12.5%, army 11.2%, air force 10%, civilian 12%.


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