Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
As defense spending surges, so do audits
Pentagon agency to triple its reviews
A surge of defense spending is prompting the Pentagon’s audit agency to triple the number of evaluations it will undertake in order to uncover or prevent unjustified profits based on incomplete, flawed or inaccurate cost data.
The Defense Contract Audit Agency intends to complete as many as 60 Truth In Negotiations Act reviews in the coming fiscal year, compared with about 20 in the year ending Sept. 30, according to spokesman Christopher Sherwood. The agency completed 21 such audits in 2018 and 26 in 2017. About half the reviews focused on the top 25 defense contractors.
President Donald Trump’s efforts to bolster defense spending were aided by Congress’ decision to revise spending caps for the final two years of the 2011 Budget Control Act. That effectively added tens of billions of dollars of potential defense spending to the Pentagon budget: $90.3 billion in fiscal 2020 and $81.3 billion in the following year.
Congress has signaled its concern that the money could be misspent. The staff of Republican Sen. Charles Grassley, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, as well as investigators for Democratic Rep. Elijah Cummings, chairman of the House Oversight Committee, are already reviewing the Pentagon’s enforcement of the law intended to prevent unjustified profits based on incomplete, flawed or inaccurate cost and pricing data for military unique items.
“The committee is investigating whether defense contractors are providing complete and accurate cost data, as required by law,” Cummings said in an emailed statement.
The 1962 Truth In Negotiations Act sought to put government contracting officers on equal footing with company counterparts, requiring firms during negotiations to provide government buyers all the variables that influenced the final price of a product or service unique to the military. They also must legally certify that the information is accurate, complete and current.
The audits are separate from Pentagon reviews that uncover instances of overcharging for basic spare parts such as nuts and pins. Those types of goods are considered “commercial items,” normally exempt from the law’s price-data requirements since there is already publicly available data with which to compare them.