Our Work - Contract Oversight
TweetThe use of contractors to provide services to the federal government has grown dramatically since the start of the last decade. According to USAspending.gov, in FY 2000 contract spending was approximately $200 billion, and in FY 2011 contract spending exceeded $535 billion, the majority of which was spent on services. POGO investigations have found that these contractor services cost almost two times more—and in the case of the Pentagon as much as six times more—what it would cost if the same work was performed by a federal employee. The move to “smaller government” by outsourcing work has in fact created an enormous shadow government of contractors that are largely or entirely dependent on taxpayers for their revenues.
Seven Years Later: The Jury Is Still Out on Outsourcing
April 25, 2008
GAO Confirms That Bajagua Project Is A Stinky Deal
April 25, 2008
An "A" for Contracting Accountability
April 21, 2008
Flawed Thunderbirds Contract Tainted with Improper Influence
April 18, 2008
Here We Go Again: No Accountability For Federal Credit Cards; Pushes Limits To New Highs (Or Lows)
April 9, 2008
Feds Reverse Course: Some Crime Not OK
April 3, 2008
7-Day Itch
April 3, 2008
Government Subpoenas Result in Suspension for IBM
April 1, 2008
POGO supports limiting length of noncompetitive contracts in “unusual and compelling urgency” circumstances
March 31, 2008
Air Force Wants Contractors to Write Its Strategy
March 28, 2008
DOJ Issues Guidelines on Corporate Monitors
March 11, 2008
Contractors are more than a shadow government
March 11, 2008
Testimony of POGO's Scott Amey on the Status of Contracting Reform
February 27, 2008
POGO comments concerning the proposed third-party private financing for the new NNSA Weapons Project, otherwise known as the Kansas City Project
January 31, 2008
Congress Unwilling To Abide By Competitive Contracting Rules For Congressional Earmarks
November 5, 2007




