A Bibliography of Selected Studies in the Weapons Acquisition Area

A Bibliography of Selected Studies in the Weapons Acquisition Area

Author: James D. Suver

Publisher:

Published: 1972

Total Pages: 139

ISBN-13:

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It is planned to update this listing on an annual basis. The following subject areas are included in this bibliography: Changes; Contract Definition; Contractual Policies; Contractor Performance; Cost Control; Cost Estimating; Defense-Industry Relations; Government Furnished Property; Incentive Contracting; Logistics and Support; Management Systems; Multi-Year Procurement; Overhead Cost Control; Personnel; Profits; Program Management (Contractor); Project Management (Government); Requests for Proposals; Research and Development; Risk and Uncertainty; Scheduling Problems and Techniques; Source Selection; Subcontracting; Systems Analysis; Technical Performance Measurement; Total Package Procurement; Total Weapon Systems Acquisition Problems.


Designing Evaluations

Designing Evaluations

Author: United States. General Accounting Office. Program Evaluation and Methodology Division

Publisher:

Published: 1986

Total Pages: 434

ISBN-13:

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Sources of Weapon System Cost Growth

Sources of Weapon System Cost Growth

Author: Joseph George Bolten

Publisher: Rand Corporation

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 117

ISBN-13: 0833042890

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Previous studies have shown that the Department of Defense (DoD) and the military departments have historically underestimated the cost of new weapon systems. Quantifying cost growth is important, but the larger issue is why cost growth occurs. To address that issue, this analysis uses data from Selected Acquisition Reports to examine 35 mature, but not necessarily complete, major defense acquisition programs similar to the type and complexity of those typically managed by the Air Force. The programs are first examined as a complete set, then Air Force and non-Air Force programs are analyzed separately to determine whether the causes of cost growth in the two groups differ. Four major sources of cost growth were identified: (1) errors in estimation and scheduling, (2) decisions made by the government, (3) financial matters, and (4) miscellaneous sources. Total (development plus procurement) cost growth, when measured as simple averages among the program set, is dominated by decisions, which account for more than two-thirds of the growth. Most decisions-related cost growth involves quantity changes (22 percent), requirements growth (13 percent), and schedule changes (9 percent). Cost estimation (10 percent) is the only large contributor in the errors category. Less than 4 percent of the overall cost growth is due to financial and miscellaneous causes. Because decisions involving changes in requirements, quantities, and production schedules dominate cost growth, program managers, service leadership, and Congress should look for ways to reduce changes in these areas.