Today we bring you Part III of our series on DCAA’s (Defense
Contract Audit Agency) performance report – a statutorily required report where
DCAA provides a self-assessment on how it is meeting customer expectations. In
Part I, we discussed the Agency’s impressive return on investment. In Part II,
we discussed the Agency’s professional staff, the cost of performing various
types of audits, and the unimpressive sustention rate for incurred cost audits.
If you missed either Part I or Part II, click here and here, respectively. Today
we will focus on how DCAA is reducing its backlog of contractor submitted
incurred cost proposals.
As most readers know, contractors with flexibly priced
contracts (e.g. CPFF, CPIF, FPI, and T&M) are required to prepare and
submit an annual summation of costs charged to those contracts. The content of
these proposals (commonly referred to as ICE submissions), is prescribed in FAR
52.216-7, Allowable Cost and Payment. Every year, the Agency receives 6-7
thousand of these submissions. So, if the Agency is not clearing out that many,
they quickly fall behind in their responsibility and a backlog is created.
DCAA does not have sufficient staffing to conduct 6-7
thousand GAGAS-compliant incurred cost audits each year. So, it developed a
risk-based approach to selecting those that they will audit. Contractors are
divided into high-risk and low-risk. High risk contractors are audited while
indirect rates and incurred costs on submissions from low-risk contractors are
simply accepted as proposed. In fiscal year 2017, DCAA closed out 6,786
incurred cost submissions but only 1,527 of those were audited. The remaining
5,259 were simply closed without any audit effort performed. Expressed in terms
of contract costs, the 1,527 submissions that were audited totaled $326 billion
whereas the 5,259 submissions that were not audited totaled $25.4 billion. So,
DCAA effectively audited 90 percent of the contract costs while auditing only
23 percent of submissions. So, while $25 billion might be a lot to leave on the
table, and contractors knowing their chance of being audited are negligible
might be tempted to less diligent in excluding unallowable costs from their
submissions, the bottom line (90 percent coverage) does seem to be an
acceptable risk to the Government.
Overall, as a result of this risk-based approach to auditing
incurred costs, the Agency has reduced the incurred cost backlog from 21,000 in
fiscal year 2011 to a manageable 2,860 at the end of fiscal year 2017
DCAA has been often criticized for taking too long to
complete audits. One of the metrics that Congress wanted DCAA to track was its
ability to meet due dates. DCAA reported that it met agreed-to due dates 78
percent of the time (by comparison, it met due dates only 32 percent of the
time in fiscal year 2012 and has been steadily improving each year. The key to
this metric is the definition of “agreed-to” due date. That is different that “requested”
due date. Say, for example, a contracting officer requests an audit to be
completed in 30 days. DCAA acknowledges the request but says that it cannot
complete the audit in 30 days but can complete it 45 days. The contracting
officer agrees to accept the audit in 45 days. The requested due date was 30
days but the agreed-to due date was 45 days.
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