Entitlements "at last day of duty" include "retiring leave, or annual leave not taken", Mr Rennie said.
Overall remuneration figures included any benefit received including performance pay, employer contributions to superannuation, the value of use of a vehicle and any annual leave in excess of 20 days per annum.
Mr Rennie, whose role includes setting and reviewing the pay of public service chief executives, said their remuneration had fallen by 2 per cent during the 2010/2011 year and 3 per cent the year prior.
"This lower expenditure reflects an environment of fiscal restraint, setting modest remuneration expectations, and a reduced number of public service chief executives, as a result of agency amalgamations."
However many chief executives were paid more - in most cases the increases were in the order of $10,000.
Mr Rennie also has a role in advising on wider state sector bosses' pay rates such as health board and tertiary education chief executives' pay.
He said he expected the boards of those organisations "to exercise restraint when considering increases to chief executive remuneration, and to propose increases only where the chief executive has performed strongly or in exceptional circumstances.
One of the biggest pay increases was the $80,000 raise Waitemata District Health Board chief executive Dave Davies received, which took his pay in his last year in the job to between $480,000 and $489,999.
Mr Rennie's own pay increased by $30,000 last year, taking him to between $480,000 and $489,999.
The highest-paid unelected government employees were chief executives of SOEs, who earned as much as $1.3 million last year.