{"id":1338,"date":"2013-11-08T16:27:39","date_gmt":"2013-11-08T16:27:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/lexingtoninstitute.org\/?p=1338"},"modified":"2013-11-15T16:20:20","modified_gmt":"2013-11-15T16:20:20","slug":"acquisition-reform-is-not-the-same-as-reducing-defense-overhead-costs","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.lexingtoninstitute.org\/acquisition-reform-is-not-the-same-as-reducing-defense-overhead-costs\/","title":{"rendered":"Acquisition Reform Is Not The Same As Reducing Defense Overhead Costs"},"content":{"rendered":"

There is a tendency to conflate acquisition reform and defense overhead costs and to believe that the only way to achieve significant savings is by instituting wholesale changes to the way decisions are made on major weapons systems. So we fiddle endlessly with the number of milestones and decision points in the weapons systems acquisition cycle and weigh the comparative benefit of cost plus versus fixed price incentive fee contracts.<\/p>\n

Acquisition reform is hard. It involves structural changes to a system that must remain functional while such changes are being made. The oft-used analogue is of trying to change a car\u2019s transmission fluid while it is traveling at speed down a winding road. There are many stakeholders with lots of contending interests.<\/p>\n

While acquisition reform is hard, reducing the overhead costs of the current system, need not be. The reason I say this is because cutting costs involves more a change in ones state of mind, or values, rather than processes and procedures.<\/p>\n

Perhaps the most insightful view of the problem and its solutions was provided by John Hamre, former Deputy Secretary of defense and currently President of the Center for Strategic and International Studies. In a two page memo titled \u201cAn Honest Look at the Military-Industrial Complex,\u201d Dr. Hamre made the simple observation that the key to our success in the Cold War was relying on private industry to provide the weapons systems, goods and services for our military. The private sector was able to achieve a balance between efficiency and creativity that enabled the U.S. to field the best military in the world without going bankrupt. He went on to say:<\/p>\n

We harnessed the energy and creative power of the profit motive to national security. We won the Cold War not because we fielded a bigger military establishment, but because we used advanced technology and private sector initiative to sustain a qualitative military edge over the Soviet Union. Industry became the indispensable partner to our armed forces in the defense of our country.<\/i><\/p>\n

Hamre warned that we are in danger of seriously damaging this partner, with long-term consequences. There are four factors putting this at risk.<\/p>\n