Imagine you're the Deputy
Secretary of Defense, and in walks a group of consultants who tell you that you
can save $125 billion over five years if you act on their recommendations. They
say you need a clear science and technology strategy, to establish rigorous
management processes, and so forth. They say savings will start immediately.
You flip through their PowerPoint brief stacked with charts and buzz words like
optimize, modernize, and agile enterprise.
You get weary when a slide shows, in pictographs, how you can re-program the
efficiency savings to 50 brigades, 10 carrier strike groups, or 83 F-35 fighter
wings over the same five year time frame. Slow down, you think. You don't want
Congress getting a hold of the idea that there is $125 billion in waste can
disappear overnight because you know there are no easy answers of the kind
peddled by consultants.
That is, unless you're
Deputy Secretary of Defense Bob Work. As Craig Whitlock and Bob Woodward reported
in the Washington Post, Mr. Work did in fact get worried when he saw the chart
depicting the savings. He got worried, however, that the DoD could easily save
those billions and that Congress would want it back! The journalists wrote that
the report by private consultants unambiguously laid out "a clear
path" to $125 billion over five years. Former chairman of the Defense
Business Board Robert L. Stein called the study's data "indisputable"
because it came from the Pentagon itself. Because the DoD feared that Congress
would "use the findings as an excuse to slash the defense budget,"
officials decided to suppress the "internal study that exposed $125
billion in administrative waste."
Frank Kendall,
Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics
(AT&L), fired back that the consultants' study was "shallow" and
failed to grasp basic obstacles to restructuring the public sector. The
Washington Post journalists shrugged at the response and suggested that
Pentagon officials were just trying to "wait things out" rather than
tackle the hard issues at hand. It makes one wonder whether the journalists
actually read the report. Perhaps a brief foray into the 125
billion-dollar report will give the reader a feel for the argument at hand.
The report, little more than
a deck of PowerPoint slides, starts out by showing potential savings based on
projected productivity gains. The consultants assumed 7% annual productivity
gains to get to the $125 billion, whereas 3% annual gains only get you $60
billion in savings. Why 7% productivity? Because private sector industries
"commonly show similar gains." Never mind the fact that economists
generally agree that productivity
has been flat for years. The industry benchmarks used in the report are not
representative of defense support activities. Productivity in "office
supplies, stationary, and gift store" is not representative of
productivity in defense, even if they are DoD inputs. Moreover, there is no
generally acceptable way of measuring productivity in the DoD, even for support
functions. This is because the defense "marketplace" is only a loose
facsimile of the kind you read about in economics text books.
Supposing that the DoD could
achieve 7% productivity gains, how would the consultants recommend the DoD gets
there? Productivity gains amounting to $46-89 billion can be achieved through
"contract spend optimization" which requires more rigorous vendor
negotiations, aggregating spending to gain economies of scale, increasing
productivity, and eliminating "gold plating." This is basically all
they had to say on regarding half of the total savings. The supposedly specific
and actionable recommendations merely restate the objectives of existing job
functions. For example, to anyone familiar with defense vendor negotiations, it
is hard to believe that regulations on contracting officers could get any more rigorous.
Lawyers are brought into the discussions at ever
earlier stages in preparation for award protests. In short, the
recommendations are empty.
In almost all cases,
productivity gains were implied by consolidating information technology (IT)
infrastructure and leveraging its output, big data. But even smaller firms find
implementing IT solutions difficult, fraught with unforeseen challenges and
cost overruns. Striving for bigger and better data is often a fool's errand,
even for relatively simple operations.
An early example
of the DoD implementing streamlined IT efficiencies came during the Korean War.
The Munitions Board attempted to centralize the inventory data of machine tools
using IBM punch cards to optimize allocations. The attributes of each machine
were recorded and contractors could read the cards to locate their tools
instead of doing on-site inspections. But machine tools are more complicated
than the Munitions Board had assumed. The IBM cards completely failed to convey
important nuances in machine tools leading to expensive errors and lost time.
The initiative and countless other more like it sought to strip away complexity
and replace it with the pristine order that consolidation imposes.
The out-sized share of the
PowerPoint went to specific discussions on IT consolidations, whereas the
consultants hand-waved issues of contracting and civilian fringe costs. This is
concerning because the Task Group Chair, Mr. Phil Odeen, also has positions at Booz
Allen Hamilton and Globant, both of which are IT services providers.
According to the meeting
minutes, he did most of the talking. Was the report a well-intended set of
recommendations, a business pitch, or both?
The easiest way to see that
the consultants were blowing smoke comes at the end. They write that
"Technical solutions... will not, by themselves, achieve the savings."
The technical solutions are a tool that must be supported by a culture change.
For example, there needs to be "strong, consistent top leadership,"
"clear decision-making authority" and "defined accountability at
all levels." Here, the consultants pay lip service to what really matters,
and reference their earlier
work on culture change. The only problem is that their conclusions are
antithetical to all present discussions on defense reform!
The consultants want more centralized planning and more rigorous regulations. Congressional
leaders, such as Rep. Mac Thornberry and Sen. John McCain, are calling for
decentralization and fewer
regulations. Legislation is being discussed would devolve some of the planning
and programming decisions from AT&L down to the services. Further, AT&L
itself may decentralize, separating its R&D functions from acquisition and
logistics. The Pentagon is in the awkward position of being pulled in two
directions.
Yet being pulled in two
directions is par for the course in the Pentagon. For example, the landmark
1986 Goldwater-Nichols
Act attempted to decentralize operations, but, as Rep. Thornberry said,
it "unintentionally fueled a runaway, outmoded bureaucracy." The
public should take little solace, however, that any prospective legislation
would turn out differently. As scholar Fred Thompson found,
decentralization requires giving operating managers the "maximum authority
feasible, or, in the alternative, subjecting them to a minimum of
constraints." But Congress doesn’t trust the lower echelons and wants
to increase constraints! For example, the legislators want binding unit cost
and schedule targets earlier in the acquisition process, at Milestone A, which
is at initiation of Technology Development or prototyping. (Note that the troublesome
F-35 went through a Milestone A equivalent in 1996. Certainly that is too early
to smooth over programmatic risks with extensive before-the-fact controls.)
Ultimately, one must
acknowledge that the fundamental principles of complex operations are
decentralization, redundancy, and self-organization. While policymakers admit
the inherent complexity in defense and claim they desire to decentralize
operations, they shy away from actual implementation because of its superficial
illogicalities. Hence they attempt to centralize, eliminate duplication, and
control operations through extensive regulations. While in many ways it mirrors
the de facto way of doing business in the 1940s and 1950s, a return to direct
budget appropriations to decentralized operating units who are controlled using
after-the-fact evaluations would go a long way to effecting real defense
reform.
But such decentralization
means a loss of coherence at the top. It means you should be not expect a
reasonable answer from seemingly simple questions. Sen. McCain, for example,
fumed that "The DoD cannot tell us how many civilian contractors they
employ, no one knows how many people work for the Department of Defense."
While that line was trumpeted around as a clear indication that the DoD didn't
have its management in order, one has to sympathize with the poor analyst in
some cubicle in the Pentagon who knows that the data are flat out not there,
nor should they be. Just for starters, are we talking about direct charging
workers from prime contractors, or down to the second tier, or third, or
fourth, and so forth? Do we include indirect workers? Or which types of
indirect? Are we talking physical headcounts or full-time equivalents based on
hours charged? The analyst would think, “For there to be any chance of having a
clean answer at my fingertips, it would require far more comprehensive cost
controls.” The Senator incentivized defense officials to cover themselves with
more centralization and new regulations at the same time he cried that the DoD
is too centralized and bloated with regulations.
The answer turned out to be
about 740 thousand. But the better question is whether that matters. Is there
any basis for judging 740 thousand contractors as too high or too low, even if
the number were not arbitrary in some sense? The Sen. McCain’s statement makes
clear that he views the defense enterprise as a vast administrative problem,
where decentralized operations can be neatly aggregated to inform policy. In
this way, the Senator champions the utopian view of consolidation and big data
at the same time he champions decentralization and competition. At least the
consultants who would save $125 billion on baseless assumptions were consistent,
if shallow, in their views.