Wednesday, June 26, 2019

Foreign Sourcing in Government Procurement

According to a recent Government Accountability Office REPORT the U.S. government awarded contracts valued at about $12 billion to foreignlocated firms, of which about $5 billion went to firms with reported locations in the other six main parties to the World Trade Organization Agreement on Government Procurement (GPA) and the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) (see figure). Conversely, government procurement databases indicated the central governments of these parties awarded an estimated $7 billion to foreign sources, out of which about $2 billion was U.S.-sourced. Canada and Mexico awarded most of the U.S.-sourced contracts. GAO was able to determine that the U.S. government awarded more, by contract value, to foreign-owned firms located abroad than to foreign-owned, U.S.-located firms. Moreover, more than 80 percent of U.S. government contracts awarded to foreign-owned firms located abroad were Department of Defense contracts performed abroad. Overall, while available contract data enable broad crosscountry comparisons, they do not necessarily show where the goods are produced, where the services are delivered, or where the profits go, among other economic effects.

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