Employment in the public and private sectors by sex and Welsh local authority

Standard shorthand is used in this table: [c] = confidential information, [u] = low reliability.

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Data valuesData descriptionYearGeographySex
27,433,100Total in employment2001United KingdomPersons
1,238,600Total in employment2001WalesPersons
28,200Total in employment2001Isle of AngleseyPersons
49,200Total in employment2001GwyneddPersons
45,500Total in employment2001ConwyPersons
40,700Total in employment2001DenbighshirePersons
32,100Total in employment2001CeredigionPersons
45,400Total in employment2001PembrokeshirePersons
69,000Total in employment2001CarmarthenshirePersons
96,800Total in employment2001SwanseaPersons
50,700Total in employment2001Neath Port TalbotPersons
56,100Total in employment2001BridgendPersons
90,200Total in employment2001Rhondda Cynon TafPersons
20,500Total in employment2001Merthyr TydfilPersons
67,700Total in employment2001CaerphillyPersons
26,500Total in employment2001Blaenau GwentPersons
38,400Total in employment2001TorfaenPersons
69,600Total in employment2001FlintshirePersons
59,400Total in employment2001WrexhamPersons
59,200Total in employment2001PowysPersons
54,500Total in employment2001Vale of GlamorganPersons
139,300Total in employment2001CardiffPersons
39,600Total in employment2001MonmouthshirePersons
60,300Total in employment2001NewportPersons
27,797,600Total in employment2002United KingdomPersons
1,256,500Total in employment2002WalesPersons
28,100Total in employment2002Isle of AngleseyPersons
51,100Total in employment2002GwyneddPersons
44,600Total in employment2002ConwyPersons
40,100Total in employment2002DenbighshirePersons
32,000Total in employment2002CeredigionPersons
47,000Total in employment2002PembrokeshirePersons
70,300Total in employment2002CarmarthenshirePersons
97,100Total in employment2002SwanseaPersons
50,000Total in employment2002Neath Port TalbotPersons
57,500Total in employment2002BridgendPersons
93,500Total in employment2002Rhondda Cynon TafPersons
21,000Total in employment2002Merthyr TydfilPersons
68,200Total in employment2002CaerphillyPersons
26,900Total in employment2002Blaenau GwentPersons
37,600Total in employment2002TorfaenPersons
72,700Total in employment2002FlintshirePersons
59,600Total in employment2002WrexhamPersons
61,800Total in employment2002PowysPersons
54,900Total in employment2002Vale of GlamorganPersons
141,500Total in employment2002CardiffPersons
39,600Total in employment2002MonmouthshirePersons
61,400Total in employment2002NewportPersons
28,056,500Total in employment2003United KingdomPersons
1,279,200Total in employment2003WalesPersons
29,700Total in employment2003Isle of AngleseyPersons
52,600Total in employment2003GwyneddPersons
46,000Total in employment2003ConwyPersons
42,100Total in employment2003DenbighshirePersons
33,200Total in employment2003CeredigionPersons
48,900Total in employment2003PembrokeshirePersons
70,000Total in employment2003CarmarthenshirePersons
99,800Total in employment2003SwanseaPersons
51,900Total in employment2003Neath Port TalbotPersons
57,700Total in employment2003BridgendPersons
93,200Total in employment2003Rhondda Cynon TafPersons
21,500Total in employment2003Merthyr TydfilPersons
70,500Total in employment2003CaerphillyPersons
26,700Total in employment2003Blaenau GwentPersons
38,200Total in employment2003TorfaenPersons
74,500Total in employment2003FlintshirePersons
61,800Total in employment2003WrexhamPersons
60,700Total in employment2003PowysPersons
54,400Total in employment2003Vale of GlamorganPersons
144,200Total in employment2003CardiffPersons
40,000Total in employment2003MonmouthshirePersons
61,600Total in employment2003NewportPersons
28,330,400Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004United KingdomPersons
15,340,700Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004United KingdomMales
12,989,700Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004United KingdomFemales
1,311,100Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004WalesPersons
702,800Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004WalesMales
608,300Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004WalesFemales
30,000Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004Isle of AngleseyPersons
15,900Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004Isle of AngleseyMales
14,000Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004Isle of AngleseyFemales
54,100Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004GwyneddPersons
28,600Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004GwyneddMales
25,400Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004GwyneddFemales
47,800Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004ConwyPersons
24,900Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004ConwyMales
22,800Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004ConwyFemales
42,300Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004DenbighshirePersons
22,400Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004DenbighshireMales
19,800Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004DenbighshireFemales
33,700Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004CeredigionPersons
17,600Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004CeredigionMales
16,100Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004CeredigionFemales
49,000Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004PembrokeshirePersons
26,300Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004PembrokeshireMales
22,700Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004PembrokeshireFemales
73,300Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004CarmarthenshirePersons
40,200Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004CarmarthenshireMales
33,100Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004CarmarthenshireFemales
105,100Total in employmentYear ending 31 Dec 2004SwanseaPersons
Showing 1 to 100 of 23,904 rows
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Main information

Most recent update
26 September 2025
Next update expected
9 October 2025
Designation
Accredited official statistics
Data provider
Office for National Statistics (ONS)
Data source
Annual Population Survey (APS)

Data notes

Rounding applied

Figures are rounded to the nearest hundred and so there may be some apparent slight discrepancies between the sum of constituent items and the totals as shown.

Overview

Summary of dataset and variables

The data in this dataset relates to the status of persons employed in Wales, breaking the total down into those who work in the public sector and those who work in the private sector.

Data collection or calculation

These data are taken from the ANNUAL datasets from the Labour Force Survey (LFS) carried out by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), providing labour market data for the local authorities in Wales. The availability of local authority data is dependent upon on an enhanced sample (around 350 per cent larger) for the annual LFS, which commenced in 2001.

For years labelled 2001 to 2004 in this dataset, the actual periods covered are the 12 months running from March in the year given to February in the following year (e.g. 2001 = 1 March 2001 to 28 February 2002).

Since 2004, the annual data have been produced on a rolling annual basis, updated every three months, and the dataset is now referred to as the Annual Population Survey (APS). The rolling annual averages are on a calendar basis with the first rolling annual average presented here covering the period 1 January 2005 to 31 December 2005, followed by data covering the period 1 April 2005 to 31 March 2006, with rolling quarterly updates applied thereafter. Note therefore that the consecutive rolling annual averages overlap by nine months. The only available official source of time series information on public sector employment on a consistent National Accounting basis for Wales and the other UK countries and English regions is the Office for National Statistics publication Regional Analysis of Public Sector Employment.

The definition of the public sector used in this dataset is that used by the LFS/APS, essentially that owned, funded or run by central or local government. Further some respondents to the survey may not always be aware of whether their industry is in the public or private sector. In comparison with employer-based estimates, the LFS/APS tends to over-estimate public sector employment levels.

Under the National Accounting definition of the public sector, GPs and higher education institutions are excluded, mainly due to their autonomous nature. The LFS/APS definition codes doctors and dentists according to whether their work is mainly NHS or private, and codes universities and other grant funded educational establishments as public sector.

Thus for this dataset, the private sector includes:

  • public limited companies;
  • limited companies;
  • self-employed individuals;
  • charities, private trusts, housing associations or other voluntary organisations (including private schools);
  • trade union employees; and
  • private contractors, even if they work exclusively for the public sector e.g. cleaning firms, consultants.

Key data on the labour market is updated every month showing the position for the latest three months, for the UK and each of the UK countries and English regions. Note these data are seasonally adjusted and also that no sub-regional (i.e. local authority) data are published by the ONS to a monthly timetable.

Annual results covering the periods described earlier are also available from the ONS, providing more detailed data from the LFS, including data for sub-Wales geographies. These annual datasets use results from the samples for the quarterly surveys used for the key series, together with results from additional persons sampled to provide a more robust (boosted) dataset, with estimates subject to much lower sampling variability.

Quarterly results are also available, again providing more detailed data from the LFS than the key series, including data for sub-Wales geographies. However, although these data are available earlier than the data taken from the annual datasets, data for sub-Wales geographies taken from the quarterly datasets are no longer included on StatsWales as the results are far less robust than those which come from the annual datasets.

Note that as data are taken from the ANNUAL Labour Force Survey datasets they do NOT exactly match annual averages derived from the 4 QUARTERLY datasets in the relevant 12 month period covered due to differences in the sampling structure.

Nomis is the ONS's official portal for labour market statistics. Note that some estimates from Nomis for the APS may differ slightly from those presented here due to differences in how local authority geographies are constructed.

Statistical quality

Annual Population Survey (APS) responses are weighted to official population projections. The projections for 2020 were 2018-based, and, therefore, were based on demographic trends that pre-dated the COVID-19 pandemic.

To allow for different trends during the pandemic the responses for the APS have been reweighted on the 9 September 2021 to new populations derived using growth rates from HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) Real Time Information (RTI). The reweighting has been applied from year ending March 2020 data onwards and gives improved estimates of both rates and levels.

The changes ONS have made to the weighting should reduce the bias of estimates at high levels of aggregation. Some smaller breakdowns may be impacted negatively and more extreme changes could be seen given the reduced size of the underlying sample since the start of the pandemic.

As the data come from a survey, the results are sample-based estimates and therefore subject to differing degrees of sampling variability, i.e. the true value for any measure lies in a differing range about the estimated value. This range or sampling variability increases as the detail in the data increases, for example individual local authority data are subject to higher variability than Wales data.

Published by

Organisation
Welsh Government
Contact email
labourmarket.stats@gov.wales

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