Competition Report FAQ
From FPDS-NG
Contents
Why is there a new competition report?
The goal of the new competition report is to:
- Create a better management tool for agencies by more accurately measuring competition on both contracts and orders
- Generate an easier to understand summary of competitive and non-competitive activity for agencies and the public
How does the new report improve data accuracy?
Data accuracy is improved in two ways:
- First, the new report measures competition at both the contract level and, for multiple award contracts, the order level. Orders issued under multiple award contracts are only considered competed if fair opportunity was given.
- Second, agencies must identify whether they used competition. Agencies were not required to submit competition information prior to an FPDS system change in October 2010. As a result, agencies did not report competition on nearly $15 billion of contract obligations in FY 2009. However, after the system change, this amount dropped to roughly $4 billion in FY 2010.
How does the new report make it easier for agency managers and the public to track and analyze competition?
The new report summarizes and categorizes all contracting activity as either competed or not competed. Under the old report, it was difficult for users to immediately differentiate competitive and noncompetitive dollars and actions.
With the new report, users can click on “workflows” and immediately see the statutory exceptions for contracts and orders on multiple award contracts. The old report required users to create separate ad hoc reports if they wanted to see which statutory exception to competition applied.
Can users do historical trend analysis with the new report?
Yes. Agencies and public users may use the new report to analyze competition on historical data.