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October 3, 2011 By AMK

The economic impact of a near-shutdown

Senate Democrats and Republicans have narrowly averted a government shutdown for the third time this year. But the stop-gap funding measure only lasts through Nov. 18, at which point Congress will probably again inch toward the same precipice as it negotiates the 2012 budget.

The bad news for the economy is obvious. Shutdown brinkmanship will divert employees’ time, make planning difficult for businesses that contract with the government, and call into question lawmakers’ ability to create credible policy.

The good news is that not everyone thinks it will have all that much economic impact, because we’ve been there before and the next rounds are likely to be no worse.

Washington Post columnist Ezra Klein pointed out this week after the Senate’s agreement on Monday that the shutdown brinkmanship itself damages the economy. Klein asserted that, in fact, the immediate effects are probably somewhat worse than you think.

One cost is straightforward: Preparing for a potential shutdown takes employees’ time away from performing other, more vital functions. But there are also knock-on costs tied to the rise in uncertainty and loss of confidence that accompany such talks.

About one-quarter of workers in the United States are federal employees or work for a company that contracts with the government, said Heather Boushey, senior economist at the liberal Center for American Progress. Contractors who don’t know if their services will be needed may postpone any new hiring, even if their current employees are stretched thin.

“One would have to infer that this is certainly affecting their business plans and how they’re thinking about what sorts of investments they’re going to make,” she said.

It’s not just employers whose plans are changed by discussion of a shutdown. If you’re an investor and you think the U.S. won’t update its power grid, improve its schools, or guarantee health care for its sick, you’re probably less inclined to invest there, Boushey said.

“I’m not saying that this is devastating to the economy,” she added. “But in no way, shape, or form is this actually spurring economic recovery.”

Shutdown talks also call into question the government’s ability to create credible future policy, according to Alec Phillips, Washington policy analyst for Goldman Sachs.

“The concern is not so much about whether the government will be open for one or two days–or closed for one or two days–as a result of a shutdown,” Phillips said. Lawmakers’ ability to agree on the basic functioning of government signals whether they’ll be able to agree on more significant reforms, such as the savings the joint committee on deficit reduction has been charged with finding by November.

But one silver lining is that not every economist thinks the recent standoffs had much of a negative effect on the economy. Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, in an e-mail called the impact “negligible,” saying it failed to grip the nation like the summer’s debt-ceiling debate.

That’s because we’ve already experienced this, Goldman’s Phillips said. The government has shut down 17 times in U.S. history. So while brinkmanship “clearly doesn’t help” confidence, it lacks the clear negative impact of the debt-limit negotiations.

Future budget negotiations may have an even more slight impact.

The first time the government came close to a shutdown was probably the scariest, said Alex Brill, a research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a former senior adviser and chief economist to the House Ways and Means Committee. The more often Congress reaches the brink and comes to an agreement before shutting down, the less damaging the process becomes, he said. People may have less confidence in the political process, but, over time, shutdown talks will have a more limited impact on their confidence in the economy itself.

So long as the process marches toward a better budget, the cost of the brinkmanship is worth it, Brill contends. He draws the analogy of a two companies merging. The acquiring company incurs a significant one-time charge. But that charge is ultimately made up for in the improved business.

Although this week’s shutdown confrontation received little media attention compared to the previous two, it is a harbinger of the confrontations that will take place in November when the entire 2012 budget is up for negotiation.

But there is some, if not much, comfort in the fact that while the upcoming negotiations may be charged, their economic impact will likely be no worse than the three to-the-brink-of-shutdown talks this year.

— by Catherine Hollander – National Journal – September 28, 2011- at http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=48911&dcn=e_gvet

Filed Under: Government Contracting News Tagged With: budget, budget cuts, continuing resolution, economic recovery, government shutdown

August 3, 2011 By AMK

Coast Guard drowning in Deepwater cost overages

Total costs for the Coast Guard’s Deepwater boat and ship replacement program could rise by another $5 billion and even higher, according to a new report from the Government Accountability Office.

The Coast Guard took over as lead systems integrator for the troubled contracting program in 2007 and established a $24.2 billion program baseline. The Coast Guard recently indicated that total acquisition costs could be as much as $29.3 billion, according to the report from the GAO released July 28.

But even that larger estimate likely falls short of the true total costs because the Coast Guard has not revised baselines for all assets, including the Offshore Patrol Cutter, one of the costliest assets in the program, the auditors said.

Also, the agency has further revised its schedule, which has not been fully reflected in the most recent cost estimate, the GAO report states. Furthermore, the reliability of cost estimates for some assets is questionable because the Coast Guard did not follow best practices.

“The Deepwater Program as a whole continues to exceed the cost and schedule baselines approved by DHS in May 2007, but several factors preclude a solid understanding of the true cost and schedule of the program,” the GAO report states, adding that “additional cost growth is looming.”

“The Coast Guard and Homeland Security Department officials agreed that the annual funding needed to support all approved Deepwater acquisition program baselines exceeds current and expected funding levels, particularly in this constrained fiscal climate,” the GAO said.

Coast Guard acquisition officials expect that up to $1.9 billion a year would be needed to support the stated baseline, while anticipating a maximum of $1.2 billion a year. As such, the Deepwater program goals are “unachievable.”

GAO auditors said the situation of managing a portfolio expected to exceed the appropriated budget is likely to lead to “unhealthy competition for funding” among programs within the portfolio.

“Over the past four years, the Coast Guard has strengthened its acquisition management capabilities in its role as lead systems integrator and decision maker for Deepwater acquisitions,” the GAO report states. “Now, the Coast Guard needs to take broader actions to address the cost growth, schedule delays, and expected changes to planned capabilities that have made the Deepwater program, as presented to Congress, unachievable.”

The GAO made nine recommendations, including that the Coast Guard consider identifying tradeoffs to the planned Deepwater fleet and take other actions to increase confidence that assets would meet mission needs. DHS officials agreed with the recommendations.

About the Author: Alice Lipowicz is a staff writer covering government 2.0, homeland security and other IT policies for Defense Systems.  This article was published 7/29/2011 at http://defensesystems.com/articles/2011/07/29/deepwater-costs-rising.aspx?sc_lang=en.

Filed Under: Government Contracting News Tagged With: budget, Coast Guard, cost overrun, DHS, GAO

June 15, 2011 By AMK

New NASA priorities open billions in new opportunities

NASA might be cutting $1 billion from its space operations budget but a new study claims there are billions in opportunities in science and technology areas.

“As NASA shifts priorities for human spaceflight from shuttle operations to human exploration capabilities and commercial spaceflight, the budget will be redirected to a range of technology development programs,” said Steve Bochinger, president of Euroconsult North America.

The firm and its partner Omnis Inc. have released a new study, NASA Spending Outlook: Trends to 2016, which analyzes NASA’s budget.

As space operations shrink, the science budget will be redistributed among NASA centers, Bochinger said.

Among the findings:

  • The Science Mission Directorate saw an 11 percent bump in 2011 and will have a $5 billion through 2016. Goddard Space Flight Center and Langley Research Center will benefit because of the work on Earth science projects.
  • The Exploration Systems Mission Directorate will hold steady at about $3.9 billion but funds will shift away from human exploration activities.
  • The new Space Technology Directorate will get $1 billion a year from 2012 to 2016. Langley, Glenn and Ames research centers will benefit because of their work on new technologies for exploration and robotic spaceflight.
  • NASA is restructuring the Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate to focus on fundamental aeronautics and development of technologies for the Next Generation Air Transportation System.

The study also predicts that NASA’s business practices will have to change with a shift from cost-plus contracting to more fixed-price contracting.

About the Author: Nick Wakeman is the editor of Washington Technology. Article appeared June 8, 2011 at http://washingtontechnology.com/articles/2011/06/08/nasa-budget-priorities-shift.aspx?s=wtdaily_090611

Filed Under: Government Contracting News Tagged With: budget, cost-plus, fixed price, NASA, technology development

May 28, 2011 By AMK

Army report: Military has spent $32 billion since ’95 on abandoned weapons programs

The Army’s Comanche helicopter was envisioned as “the quarterback of the digital battlefield,” a technologically superior aircraft that could hide from enemies, operate at night and in bad weather, and travel farther than any other helicopter.

Gen. Richard Cody, a former vice chief of staff of the Army, called it the “most flexible, most agile” aircraft the country had ever produced.

In 2000, it ranked as the most important planned buy for the Army. Four years later, the program — which had consumed close to 20 years of work and nearly $6 billion — was abruptly shuttered.

It is one of 22 major Army weapons programs canceled since 1995, ringing up a price tag of more than $32 billion for equipment that was never built. A new study, commissioned by the Army and obtained by The Washington Post, condemns the service’s efforts as “unacceptable.”

Keep reading this article at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/capitalbusiness/army-report-military-has-spent-32-billion-since-97-on-abandoned-weapons-programs/2011/05/23/AGwuqjCH_story.html 

weapons programs eventually cancelled

Filed Under: Government Contracting News Tagged With: Army, budget, DoD, industrial base, weapons systems

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