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Trump Administration Targets Tech Firms for Contract Cuts
The Trump administration is expanding its cost-cutting measures to include technology companies, following similar actions taken with consulting firms like Accenture and Deloitte. The General Services Administration (GSA) sent letters to ten tech contractors, including Dell and CDW, demanding cost justifications and seeking areas for reduction. The administration aims to curb excessive markups on IT products and services, which account for $82 billion in annual government spending.
Significant Contract Cuts
The GSA has already cancelled 11,297 contracts across 60 agencies since January, resulting in $33 billion in savings. This includes various types of contracts, from project management within departments such as the Treasury to IT services deemed unnecessary by the Education Department. Booz Allen, for example, announced 2,500 job cuts due to the administrationâs crackdown on spending.
Focus on Value-Added Resellers
The GSA's current initiative targets third-party technology firms, known as value-added resellers, who often bundle various tech products and services for government agencies. The administration intends to reduce reliance on middlemen by encouraging federal agencies to procure products directly from manufacturers, as per President Trump's April executive order.
Shifting Government Business Practices
The GSA is advocating for a change in how the government conducts business. They believe that existing government employees can handle projects previously outsourced, eliminating the need for specialized and costly external services. This move aligns with the administrationâs broader effort to reduce government waste and improve efficiency.
- The GSA is requesting detailed breakdowns of costs and markups from tech companies.
- The administration aims to reduce reliance on middlemen and increase the use of off-the-shelf products.
- Cost-cutting measures have already led to job losses in some contracting firms.
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The governmentâs monthslong quest to wring savings from federal contractors is widening and entering a new phase. The next focus: tech companies.
The governmentâs monthslong quest to wring savings from federal contractors is widening and entering a new phase. The next focus: tech companies.
The Trump administration is moving its spending review beyond consulting firms such as Accenture and Deloitte to now scrutinize contracts at a collection of companies providing sometimes obscure technology services to federal agencies.
The Trump administration is moving its spending review beyond consulting firms such as Accenture and Deloitte to now scrutinize contracts at a collection of companies providing sometimes obscure technology services to federal agencies.
The General Services Administration on Wednesday sent a letter to 10 technology contractors, including Dell and the IT provider CDW, asking executives to justify their work and find areas to cut. The U.S. spends $82 billion annually on IT products and services, and complex procurement processes have led to âexcessive markups and increased costs to the taxpayer," the letter notes. âThis must change."
The letter, a copy of which was viewed by The Wall Street Journal, was sent by Josh Gruenbaum, commissioner of GSAâs Federal Acquisition Service, who is overseeing the review of federal contractors. Responses by the companies are due June 11.
Dell and CDW didnât respond to requests for comment.
The Trump administrationâs review of contracts has rattled companies that serve the government and has already led to job losses inside some contractors. Booz Allen said last week that it would cut 2,500 jobs as the administration cracks down on spending.
Though Elon Musk is stepping away from the Department of Government Efficiency, officials within the administration say the broader effort to reduce waste will continue.
Since January, the federal government has canceled 11,297 contracts across 60 agencies, leading to $33 billion in overall savings, according to a person with knowledge of the GSAâs efforts. Those cuts include everything from project management within federal agencies such as the Treasury Department to IT services no longer deemed necessary at the Education Department.
For weeks, the GSA has been going back and forth with companiesâincluding Booz Allen, Deloitte, Guidehouse and othersâto pare back and reprice some consulting contracts. The government has terminated 2,809 consulting-specific contracts to date, according to a person familiar with the GSA review. Some meetings with consulting companies will continue in the coming weeks.
The latest effort within the GSA is aimed at third-party technology firms known as value-added resellers, who often piece together different technology products and services for the government.
President Trump signed an executive order in mid-April calling on the government to buy more off-the-shelf products directly from the companies that make them. The letter from the GSA to the 10 tech companies this week suggests that the government wants to cut out middlemen, when possible. It asks the firms to provide a detailed breakdown of their costs and markups on products.
âEvaluate whether the offered pricing is appropriate given best commercial industry comparables," it states.
The GSA has been working with federal agencies to insist that existing government employees can take on projectsâwith not as much work necessarily needing to go to a federal contractor.
âWe donât need to outsource everything; we donât need to always go and buy bespoke, specialized products and services," the GSAâs Gruenbaum said in an interview. âThe point is, really, can you shape shift the way the federal government does business? We think unequivocally âyes.â"
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