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Glossary of Financial Terms
Company: For
the purposes of USASpending.org a company is any vendor defined by a DUNS
number. A DUNS number is a unique corporate identification code assigned
by Dun & Bradstreet used to track contract actions with a vendor. It
defines a separate financial reporting center within a company and translates
into a company’s name, address and related contact and financial information.
Some companies consist of only one DUNS number; large companies may be assigned
dozens of DUNS numbers, even multiple numbers at the same location.
Approximately 200,000 DUNS numbers are used in any given fiscal year.
Contract De-obligation:
A downward adjustment made to a previously issued contract obligation typically
resulting from contract termination, a change in acquisition requirements or
changes in other business conditions. De-obligations are not uncommon as
agencies adjust payments on large contracts approaching the end of their term.
Dollar totals appearing in USASpending.org rankings may show net negative
totals because de-obligations total more than obligations.
Contract Obligation:
A legal commitment by a federal agency to a vendor to procure goods or services
defined on a particular contract, task or delivery order at the specified price.
The USASpending.org contract database consists of the records of millions
of Contract Obligations annually. An obligation can be viewed like a
purchase order – it is often identical in value to the eventual payment made to
a vendor but it may not match exactly. In order for a contract to appear
in
USASpending.org in any given Fiscal Year an agency must have reported at
least one obligation against it. Large contracts consisting of hundreds of
obligations are common. The dollar figure, or “Obligation Amount,”
specified in each contract record forms the basis of all dollar aggregations in
USASpending.org.
Contract Action:
Short for Contract Transaction, this is another common name for an
individual Contract Obligation. Do not confuse Contract Actions,
Contract Records or Contract Obligations with Contract Numbers or contract
vehicles. Contract Actions represent each individual transaction on a
contract. On average there are about three Contract Actions per
contract vehicle in
USASpending.org.
Contract Record:
Another common name for an individual
Contract Obligation. Do not confuse Contract Records or Contract
Obligations with Contract Numbers or contract vehicles. Contract
Records represent each individual transaction on a contract. On
average there are about three Contract Records per contract vehicle in
USASpending.org.
Fiscal Year:
For the federal government a Fiscal Year is the 12-month period beginning on
October 1 and ending on September 30. A fiscal year is defined by the last
two digits of the calendar year in which the bulk of the fiscal year falls.
For example, the period spanning October 1, 2007 through September 30, 2008 is
called FY 2008. Each individual contract obligation is assigned a fiscal
year in USASpending.org based on the Sign Date of the obligation – the
date a government agency committed to making the Contract Obligation.
Fiscal year dollar totals – whether totals of agency spending, company revenue,
etc. – are aggregations of all the Obligation Amounts reported as being made
during the indicated fiscal year. Many large contracts consist of
obligations stretching over multiple Fiscal Years. The Fiscal Year is an
indication of when the spending occurred, not the start date of the contract.
Contract data appearing in USASpending.org is updated periodically
throughout the year on a roughly quarterly basis. Note that Department of
Defense contract records are subject to a 90-day delay before release to the
public.
Funding Office:
The buying office funding a contract acquisition. For example, an Army
buying office may fund a purchase on a multi-agency GSA Schedule contract where
the administering Purchase Office is within GSA. In this case the
administering purchase would appear as part of GSA and the funding purchase
office as part of the Department of Defense.
Governmentwide
Acquisition Contract (GWAC): GWACs are task or delivery order-type
contracts for Information Technology (IT) established by one agency for
governmentwide use. Most GWACS are administered by GSA, but other agencies
like NASA and HHS also administer popular GWACS. GWAC contract obligations
are included in Fedspending.org.
Grant: Any
one of approximately 1,300 authorized programs through which government
agencies provide direct assistance to state and local governments,
quasi-government entities, non-profits and individuals in fulfillment of each
agency’s goals and missions. Each agency defines and administers the terms
of their grant programs. Although grants can be awarded to commercial
entities they are not subject to the terms and conditions of the Federal
Acquisition Regulations (FAR).
GSA Schedule Contract
: Also referred to as a Multiiple Award Schedule (MAS) Contract and a
Federal Supply Schedule (FSS) Contract, the GSA Schedule Contract is
multi-agency contract vehicle negotiated and administered by the U.S. General
Services Administration that permits agencies worldwide to order directly from
vendors holding a Schedule. GSA Schedule Contracts are included in
USASpending.org.
NAICS Code:
The North American Industrial Classification System (NAICS) Code defines the
nature of a good manufactured or a service provided. The NAICS Code
replaced the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) code in the contracts data
starting around FY 2000. A NAICS code is one of two market descriptors
assigned to each contract obligation record. The other contract market
descriptor is the Product/Service Code (PSC). Generally the NAICS code is
more specific and current. Note that currently the grants database
contains no market codes at all.
Obligation Amount:
The dollar value of each individual Contract Obligation. All dollar
figures appearing in USASpending.org are based on the Obligation Amount.
Parent Company:
A Parent Company is the unique name of a Company’s parent organization – the
entity that owns the majority share of an individual company as defined by its
DUNS number. Parent Companies are assigned by Eagle Eye researchers in
order to make the contract data more relevant and useful. A Parent Company
consists of one or more subsidiaries and divisions. When all related
entities are “rolled up” into the proper Parent organization analysts get a more
realistic picture of the key corporate players in their area of study.
Parent Companies are updated continuously and are intended to reflect the
majority owners of a company in the current fiscal year. When Parent
Company assignments are updated in
USASpending.org all historical records are also updated. This means
that Parent Company rankings for prior years reflect the parent assignment in
the current Fiscal Year.
Prime Contract:
A legal agreement directly between a government agency and a vendor defining the
terms, conditions and pricing of goods or services to be provided by the vendor.
A contract typically supports the processes of government; a grant generally
provides assistance to individuals. The process of awarding Prime
Contracts is subject to the terms and conditions specified in the Federal
Acquisition Regulations (FAR). Currently USASpending.org tracks
approximately 1.2 million contracts annually. All data is historical in
nature – anticipated spending is not included.
Product/Service Code:
The Product/Service Code (PSC) is a traditional federal government market
descriptor defining the nature of a good manufactured or a service provided.
It is not widely used outside of the federal government. Nonetheless it
has been used by government agencies for decades and provides consistency over
long periods of time in measuring market trends. PSCs beginning with
letters (A-Z) designate services; PSCs beginning with numbers (0-9) designate
manufactured items. The first two digits of the PSC are considered
shorthand for defining the corresponding GSA Schedule program. For
example, the GSA’s Computer Hardware and Software Schedule is commonly referred
to as the “Group 70” Schedule because PSCs beginning with 70 designate computer
hardware and off-the-shelf software. Also note that the first one or two
characters of the PSC provide the organizing principle for opportunity
announcements that appear on the government’s Federal Business Opportunities
(www.fedbizopps.gov) website.
Purchase Office:
The buying office administering the purchase of goods and services under
contract. In the case of multi-agency contracts like GSA Schedules and
GWACS most often the administering purchase office is part of the same agency
that is funding the acquisition. Agencies like GSA can administer
purchases from GSA Schedule contracts on behalf of other agencies. In
these cases GSA will appear as the administering agency. This situation
accounts for a relatively small portion of all spending.
Sign Date:
The official date an agency makes a contract obligation. The Sign Date is
the basis for determining the fiscal year in which an obligation occurred.
The Sign Date is not the same as the date on which an agency formally announces
a contract award to a vendor. Furthermore, the Sign Date is not
necessarily the same date a company enters a contract payment on its books.
Differences between the government’s obligation schedule and an individual
company’s bookkeeping practices may lead to differences between when the
government and a vendor recognize contract payments and revenue.
Sub-contract:
A legal agreement between a vendor and another vendor defining the terms,
conditions and pricing of goods or services to be provided as part of a
deliverable to a federal agency. Currently sub-contracts are not part of
USASpending.org.
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