Contractor perspective of multiyear contracting for major system acquisitions

Multiyear contracting has largely fallen out of favor due to an inability to quantify savings, Congressional reluctance to commit appropriations for greater than one year and the restrictive nature of cancellation ceilings. Previous studies of multiyear contracting have concentrated on advantages to...

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Main Author: Gonzalez, Richard Frank
Other Authors: Desbrow, Sandra M.
Language:en_US
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/30864
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-308642014-11-27T16:17:46Z Contractor perspective of multiyear contracting for major system acquisitions Gonzalez, Richard Frank Desbrow, Sandra M. Lamm, David V NA NA Management Multiyear contracting has largely fallen out of favor due to an inability to quantify savings, Congressional reluctance to commit appropriations for greater than one year and the restrictive nature of cancellation ceilings. Previous studies of multiyear contracting have concentrated on advantages to the Government and neglected the needs and motivation of industry. This study examines the perspective of prime contractors awarded a major system multiyear contract from 1985 to 1991. A survey was conducted to obtain the contractor perspective, counterbalanced with responses from the Government program offices which administered the contracts. This study concluded that: contractors desire a greater say in what programs are selected for multiyear; successful programs, as often as not, still contain an element of instability; contractors believe compensation for risk undertaken is not entirely adequate; and savings from multiyear are potentially greater but still derived entirely from economic order quantity purchases. 2013-04-26T18:59:14Z 2013-04-26T18:59:14Z 1994-06 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/30864 en_US This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. As such, it is in the public domain, and under the provisions of Title 17, United States Code, Section 105, it may not be copyrighted. Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
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language en_US
sources NDLTD
description Multiyear contracting has largely fallen out of favor due to an inability to quantify savings, Congressional reluctance to commit appropriations for greater than one year and the restrictive nature of cancellation ceilings. Previous studies of multiyear contracting have concentrated on advantages to the Government and neglected the needs and motivation of industry. This study examines the perspective of prime contractors awarded a major system multiyear contract from 1985 to 1991. A survey was conducted to obtain the contractor perspective, counterbalanced with responses from the Government program offices which administered the contracts. This study concluded that: contractors desire a greater say in what programs are selected for multiyear; successful programs, as often as not, still contain an element of instability; contractors believe compensation for risk undertaken is not entirely adequate; and savings from multiyear are potentially greater but still derived entirely from economic order quantity purchases.
author2 Desbrow, Sandra M.
author_facet Desbrow, Sandra M.
Gonzalez, Richard Frank
author Gonzalez, Richard Frank
spellingShingle Gonzalez, Richard Frank
Contractor perspective of multiyear contracting for major system acquisitions
author_sort Gonzalez, Richard Frank
title Contractor perspective of multiyear contracting for major system acquisitions
title_short Contractor perspective of multiyear contracting for major system acquisitions
title_full Contractor perspective of multiyear contracting for major system acquisitions
title_fullStr Contractor perspective of multiyear contracting for major system acquisitions
title_full_unstemmed Contractor perspective of multiyear contracting for major system acquisitions
title_sort contractor perspective of multiyear contracting for major system acquisitions
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/30864
work_keys_str_mv AT gonzalezrichardfrank contractorperspectiveofmultiyearcontractingformajorsystemacquisitions
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