Illinois state employee count rising, payroll highest since Great Recession

[May 28, 2025]  By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributor

(The Center Square) – With government hiring across Illinois now outpacing hiring in the private sector, Wirepoints Executive Editor Mark Glennon worries the worst may still be yet to come for the state’s increasingly unstable job market.  

The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) building in Springfield.
By Greg Bishop | The Center Square

Data shows the state now employs some 55,340 workers, with many of the more recent hires coming at social services agencies such as the Department of Children and Family Services and the Department of Human Services.

“We have as severe a budget issue this year as we've had since the Great Recession and this is going to be extremely challenging to find out how to pay for these new jobs,” Glennon told The Center Square. “It just reflects an entirely upside-down mentality that's out of touch with the reality of the economics and what people want. Any growth that we’ve had in jobs is coming from the government.”

While some state leaders are heralding the new staff additions as the byproduct of a more efficient and productive system, Glennon said it’s just more of the same irresponsible behavior, with the state now being forced to pay the price for all the economic turmoil.

“Year after year, taxpayers are leaving the state and taking large amounts of income with them to other states that have a better status fiscally,” he said. “There's no attention being paid to the underlying problems. The taxpayers know this. Illinois has lost its competitiveness. It's now a drag on the national economy in terms of contribution to GDP and employment.”

Lawmakers have no one to blame but themselves for all the dysfunction, including the state’s suddenly shrinking population, Glennon said.

“That's the ultimate result of more government spending and more government growth,” he said. “That’s really at the heart of our problem, employers and population leaving or at least not coming here. There's no attention being paid to the underlying problems.”

A recent Pew Charitable Trusts report highlights the last time public-sector hiring outpaced private employers was in 2007, or at the start of the Great Recession. Since 2023 and for the first time in more than three decades, data shows public-sector wages have also been growing faster than those in the private sector.

 

 

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