So bloated’: Jim’s Mowing boss wants to sack 1.7 million Aussies

The businessman behind a $1 billion empire says Aussie workers have become “unsackable ... no matter how badly they do” in a blistering attack.
News.com.au
January 17, 2026
Worrying signs with Australia's bloated public service sector
The millionaire Jim’s Mowing boss Jim Penman has launched a blistering attack on Australia’s government bureaucracy, urging it be cut...
Millionaire businessman Jim Penman has launched a blistering attack on Australia’s government bureacracy, calling for it to be cut down by two-thirds.
“I cannot comprehend how the public service works. It’s so, so bloated,” Mr Penman told news.com.au this week.
“People are un-sackable. It doesn’t matter how badly they do. There is no concern about efficiency whatsoever.
“My best estimate is you could probably cut bureaucracy by two-thirds and you’d have a much better functioning government.”
Mr Penman built the Jim’s Mowing franchise network that turns over $1 billion a year and has expanded into more than 50 services including cleaning and dog washing.
He was a vocal critic of the Covid lockdowns in Victoria and hundreds of his franchisees joined an unsuccessful class action against the state government.
Mr Penman built the Jim’s Mowing Australian and New Zealand franchise network that turns over $1 billion a year.
Mr Penman believed zoning laws were the primary cause of the country’s housing affordability crisis.
The businessman announced his support for the Libertarian Party in October, and is considering running as a candidate in Victoria’s state election later this year.

Though he singled out the Victorian government as “particularly appalling,” he believed public sector bloat was a federal issue, weighing down the country’s productivity and adding to a strict regulatory atmosphere in business and construction.
“We are really killing ourselves as a nation. The cost is unimaginable.”
He believed zoning laws were the primary cause of the country’s housing affordability crisis.
“In Houston, Texas, where they’ve got limited regulations on zoning, houses cost half what they do here,” he said.
“If you go to San Francisco with high levels of zoning, they cost double or triple what they do here. But then people blame immigration. It’s not immigration - it’s government that’s making it.”
Mr Penman warned Australia would become “poorer” if the public sector was not cut down and it “won’t affect the multimillionaires, it’ll affect ordinary people”.
Jim's Mowing boss unleashes on Aus govt
Public sector shores up job market
There were just under 2.6 million public sector employee jobs in the month of June 2025, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics. Penman would cut that number to less than one million.

Roy Morgan gave total employment for that month at 14.2 million, which would mean 18.3 per cent or roughly one in six Aussie workers were public servants.
That would place Australia slightly below the OECD average of public sector workers, which was 18.6 per cent of total employment.
Nordic countries such as Norway, Sweden and Denmark reported very high levels of public sector employment - close to 30 per cent of total employment in 2021.
In China, nearly 50 per cent of workers were somehow in the government sector, including state-owned-enterprises, which formed a large chunk of the Chinese economy.
So Australia’s public sector isn’t particularly large by global standards. But in the years after the pandemic, it created far more jobs than the private sector.
According to an analysis from Australian Industry Group, more than 80 per cent of all jobs created in 2023 and 2024 were in the non-market sector.
Australian Industry Group Chief Executive Innes Wilcox said government-supported jobs had seen a “welcome decline” in 2025.
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Usually, the private sector accounts for about two-thirds of job creation in Australia.
When its job creation rate collapsed, the government compensated with new jobs in the public sector, where workers are directly employed by the government, and the non-market sector.