The Institute for Fiscal Studies has published a study on police officer
retention in England and Wales.
Key findings
Police force numbers are driven by changing entry rates, not exit
rates
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Police officers are not employees, as in other
occupations.
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The absence of a contract of employment implies, among
other things, that police officers cannot be made
redundant.
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Changes in police officer numbers are largely
driven by changes in the entry rate.
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Police officer numbers rose sharply between 2001 and
2005, and contracted between 2010 and 2013. Exit rates
changed little over time.
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Which officers leave, and what do they do next?
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The primary exit route for police officers is
through ordinary retirement via the police pension
schemes.
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Over the period 2004–05 to 2014–15, 62% of police officer
exits from the force were ordinary retirements, while 7%
were early retirements on the grounds of ill health. Less
than one-third (27%) were voluntary resignations from the
police force.
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Most police retire from the labour force on
leaving the police service; those who remain in the
labour force choose a variety of occupations.
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Of the third that leave the police (either through
retirement or for other reasons) and continue in
employment, 15% continue in protective services or
elementary security occupations. However, the majority go
to occupations not directly related to policing,
including administrative and secretarial (25%) and
associate professional and technical (19%) occupations.
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Leaving rates differ across police forces and
this variation reflects the relative attractiveness of
alternative occupations.
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We show that better outside local labour market
opportunities (higher wages and lower unemployment rates)
are statistically significantly associated with higher
resignation rates across police forces. Those forces
geographically close to London also have higher rates of
exit through transfers. We find no evidence that
variation in crime rates and workload affect exit from
the police service.
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Introduction
The labour market in England and Wales for police officers is
unusual in two respects. First, unlike
virtually all other occupations in the UK, police officers have
security of tenure. Police officers are not employees, but
officers under the Crown, and there are no provisions for making
police officers redundant. Hence, fluctuations in the size of the
police officer workforce are largely driven by changes in entry
rates rather than exit rates over time. Second, the requirement
that an active police officer should be ‘fully deployable’ over a
whole range of activities has underpinned a relatively young
‘normal age of retirement’ in police pension schemes relative to
most other occupations.
These two characteristics of the police labour market imply that
standard analyses of employee retirement in other occupations are
less pertinent to police officers. Exit rates are not very
sensitive to aggregate fluctuations in public spending or the
aggregate business cycle. In addition, many
police officers do not retire from the labour force on leaving
the police. Nevertheless, local conditions may be an important
factor in considering retention and exit strategies of police
officers. This briefing note therefore considers retention in the
police force: who leaves the police, what they go on to do, and
how retention differs across the individual police forces of
England and Wales.