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Catalogue of GAO and Inspectors General Reports on Contracting Issues for Fiscal Years 1997 through 2002

GAO-03-504SP Published: Mar 31, 2003. Publicly Released: Mar 31, 2003.
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Highlights

The federal government spent more than $230 billion through contracts with private industry in fiscal year 2001. Ten Executive Branch agencies account for almost 95 percent of this spending. Past reviews by Executive Branch agency inspectors general, military-department audit agencies, and the General Accounting Office (GAO) have created an extensive body of reports on the procedures and practices that federal agencies use to plan, award, and administer contracts. These reviews identified weaknesses in the contracting processes of individual agencies and contracting challenges these agencies have in common. Consequently, to facilitate literate searches of the reports concerning federal contracting matters, we compiled a catalogue of information from reports and testimonies by the 10 agencies' inspectors general, military department audit agencies, and GAO. Such a catalogue could be useful to the oversight community and others in determing (1) common contracting issues identified across multiple agencies and (2) the potential contracting-risk areas and gaps in contracting oversight across these agencies.

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William T. Woods
Director
Contracting and National Security Acquisitions

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Sarah Kaczmarek
Managing Director
Office of Public Affairs

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Contract administrationContract termsFederal agenciesInspectors generalFederal procurementContract performanceMilitary forcesSource selectionInformation technologyE-mail