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The Office of Federal Procurement Policy (OFPP) is a component of the United States Office of Management and Budget (OMB), which is part of the Executive Office of ...
Federal Procurement Reports provide contract data which may be used for geographical, market, and socio-economic analysis, as well as for measuring and assessing the impact of acquisition policy and management improvements. [6] In fiscal year 2010, [needs update] the top five departments by dollars obligated were: [7] Department of Defense ...
Title II outlines responsibility for procurements subject to the Office of Federal Procurement Policy Act. This includes assets and or services such as storage, property identification, and transportation as well as policy for utilization, disposal, transfer or disposition, regulation, standardization, and cataloging of those assets and services.
Steven Kelman, former administrator of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy during the Presidency of Bill Clinton, [42] wrote in Procurement and Public Management (1990) that the procurement system "should be significantly deregulated to allow public officials greater discretion", and that greater discretion "would allow government to gain ...
(A) Title III of the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949 (41 U.S.C. 252–266). (B) The Office of Federal Procurement Policy Act (41 U.S.C. 401 et seq.). (C) The Federal Acquisition Streamlining Act of 1994 (Public Law 103–355), except for section 315 (41 U.S.C. 265). For the purpose of applying section 315 of that Act to ...
By 1995, the Clinton administration boasted that it had shrunk the federal government by 12%, bringing the share of civilian federal jobs to its lowest point in decades. Some critics on the left ...
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is the largest office [a] within the Executive Office of the President of the United States (EOP). OMB's most prominent function is to produce the president's budget, [2] but it also examines agency programs, policies, and procedures to see whether they comply with the president's policies and coordinates inter-agency policy initiatives.
The Davis–Bacon Act of 1931 is a United States federal law that establishes the requirement for paying the local prevailing wages on public works projects for laborers and mechanics. It applies to "contractors and subcontractors performing on federally funded or assisted contracts in excess of $2,000 for the construction, alteration, or ...