Circa News - Over $9 billion was spent last week by federal agencies to close out the fiscal year /cms/images/spacer.gif

October 6, 2016 11:55 PM

2016-07-06_18-34-55

Original Article Here.
 

Over $9 billion was spent last week by federal agencies to close out the fiscal year

by Kellan Howell

October 6, 2016

 
 
#UseItOrLoseIt
 
The start of the fall season marks the beginning of a spending spree in Washington, as the federal government races to use up the rest of its budget for the year. 
 
Use it or lose it
 
September 30 is the last day of the fiscal calendar and in the weeks leading up to it, federal agencies scramble to spend what's left in their annual budgets. 
 
Why  Because federal agencies don't want Congress to see if they haven't spent all the money that was appropriated to them. The concern is if Congress sees a pattern of non-spending by agencies their annual budgets could be slashed.
 
It's a phenomenon that has been dubbed "use it or lose it," and it's costing billions of tax dollars every year. 
 
August and September spending
 
The government tends to spend a significantly larger portion of their budget in the last two months of the financial calendar. Between fiscal years 2003 and 2015, federal agencies spent almost a quarter of their annual obligated contract funds in August and September, according to a report from George Mason University's Mercatus Center. 
 
September 2016
 
In the last week of September this year, the government spent over $9 billion, $2 billion of that on Sep. 30 alone. 
 
Some of the purchases included $400,000 worth of toilet paper, over $65,000 on booze, nearly $40 million on furniture and over $45 million on cars; according to USASpending.gov. 
 
"The fiscal year-end at the federal government doesn't just have the appearance of being a big party. It, in fact, is a big party," said Adam Andrzejewski, founder of OpenTheBooks.com. 
 
Gold rush for contractors
 
The last-minute spending is a boon for contracting companies. Some procurement firms even hold seminars to advise contractors on how to seal the deal quickly, and make the most of the government's September spending.
 
 
Robert Hale, a former comptroller at the Department of Defense, and a fellow with contracting firm Booz Allen Hamilton,  said the end of the fiscal year can also be a stressful time for contractors who often have to hustle to keep up with the influx of contracts. 
 
To be fair, government agencies will often wait until the end of the fiscal year to spend money on low-priority projects like building maintenance and staff training programs, just like anyone managing a normal household budget would do. 
 
You get all these requests or proposals at the end of the year and it is stressful to try to respond to them in a quality manner...
— Robert Hale 
 
Original Article Here.
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