Make or Buy: A Systematic Approach to Department of Defense Sourcing Decisions for Services (An Interim Report)
Abstract
Over the last decade, Department of Defense (DoD) spending on service contracts more than doubled in constant terms, from $90 billion in 2000 to $183 billion in 2012. Policy makers have recently attempted to reduce or even reverse this trend, in part by emphasizing instead the "in-sourcing" of work performed under services contracts. Over the last three years, the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) has worked to develop a more systematic framework for guiding sourcing decisions for services contracts within the DoD which would have broader implications for the whole universe of budget-based decisions within the DoD. Towards that purpose, this paper analyzes the stated motivations, implementation strategies, and guiding analytical underpinnings for previous outsourcing efforts and for the currently ongoing in-sourcing initiative. It then assesses current and previous DoD methodologies for guiding sourcing decisions, highlighting the individual strengths and shortcomings of these methodologies. The third section of this paper analyzes public sector sourcing decisions in the wider context of economics and business management, to provide broader conceptual insights for more informed determinations on these sourcing decisions. All of this research is being used to develop a repeatable, verifiable, data-driven methodology to guide sourcing decisions, which will be presented in the final report of this project.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Apr 01, 2013
- Accession Number
- ADA586413
Entities
People
- David J. Berteau
- Guy Ben-ari
- Jesse Ellman
- Joachim Hofbauer
Organizations
- Center for Strategic and International Studies