TOPICS

Right now, the federal government has a couple of big priorities--fighting a war overseas and ensuring the health of citizens here at home--that have one thing in common: They cost a whole lot of money.

As a result, federal procurement spending continues to climb, blowing well past the $400 billion mark in fiscal 2006. The total of $425 billion was nearly 10 percent higher than the year before.

Much of that money goes to the handful of huge contractors that dominate the defense industry. For example, Lockheed Martin Corp.'s total of $33 billion last year was fully 27 percent higher than it received in 2005. The company's total federal contracts are now far more than the entire procurement budget of any civilian agency in the federal government. Northrop Grumman Corp. also got a substantial increase in 2006 contract awards, boosting it to nearly $19 billion, while fellow members of the top five contractors club - Boeing Co., General Dynamics Corp. and Raytheon Co. - saw smaller, yet still substantial, increases.


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Click here for the full list of the Top 200 federal contractors, from Government Executive's Aug. 15 special Procurement Preview issue.

The war has drawn some new players into the Top 200. One is Blackwater USA, the private security company that's gotten its share of attention for its efforts in Iraq - and nearly $600 million in contract awards in 2006.

Much of the war-related spending is for high-tech gear and equipment and forces on the ground, but some of it is more prosaic. For example, petroleum giants BP and ExxonMobil Corp. took their places among the biggest contractors with a combined total of well over $2 billion in Defense Department contracts last year. Likewise, the Top 200 data provide ample evidence for the notion that an army travels on its stomach. Three South Korean outfits - the Korea Agricultural Cooperative Trading Co. Ltd., Dogog Farm and Kemyong Farm Ltd. - each did hundreds of millions of dollars in business shipping fruits and vegetables to U.S. soldiers posted overseas.

Meanwhile, on the domestic side of the ledger, the effort by the Health and Human Services Department to jump-start the development of technologies for the production of flu vaccines in the United States had an immediate impact on the rankings. In May 2006, HHS awarded contracts totaling more than $1 billion to a series of companies under the initiative, immediately vaulting Glaxo- SmithKline, Novartis AG and Solvay Pharmaceuticals into the ranks of the nation's contractor elite with hundreds of millions of dollars each in awards.

COMMENTS

  • Get ready for the "fire sale". With the approach of King George's return to Crawford Texas, he will be fueling an tremendous amount of defense contract awards to his big business cronies. All will be done under the pretext of "fighting terrorism", but the real reason will be to lay the groundwork for his retirement to corporate america. I work in federal procurement and I have already seen the rush to place things on contract, circumventing competition requirements and the necessary justifications and authorizations for other than open competition. Unfortunately, I also have a family to support so I cannot place too large a magnifying glass on this abuse of power--and still feed my family. Counting the days until the twig is re-lanted in Texas!
  • I would like to review some of George Bush's Fuzzy Math budget. That seems like a huge amount to be spending on Defense. Yet we do nothing of the growing influx of Mexi-Cali immigrants who are moving to the Southwest through and across the California, Arizona and Texas Borders. What kind of defense are we talking about anyway? Because a peaceful invasion by our hispanic neighhbors to the south has already happened and continues to happen. I strongly feel that these monies could be more appropriatley spent on domestic problems - such as feeding the hungry and housing the homeless. Or maybe we are just being defensive as to why we aren't really gonna do anything about such issues?

Procurement Preview
This article is featured in the Aug. 15 special Procurement Preview issue of Government Executive. To see the full issue, click here.