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Could Save Hundreds of Millions of Dollars' which was released on 
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Testimony:

Before the Committee on Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:00 a.m. EDT Wednesday, April 28, 
2004:

Purchase Cards:

Increased Management Oversight and Control Could Save Hundreds of 
Millions of Dollars:

Statement of Gregory D. Kutz Director, Financial Management and 
Assurance; 
David E. Cooper Director, Acquisition and Sourcing Management; 
John J. Ryan, Assistant Director, Office of Special Investigations:

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-717T]:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-04-717T, a testimony before the Committee on 
Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate

Why GAO Did This Study:

From 1994 to 2003, the use of government purchase cards increased from 
$1 billion to $16 billion. During this time, agencies primarily 
focused on ways to increase the use of purchase cards. Beginning in 
2001, GAO testified and reported that significant weaknesses in 
internal controls made agencies vulnerable to fraud, waste, and abuse, 
and inefficient purchasing actions. In response to increased use of 
purchase cards and serious control weaknesses in the purchase card 
program, GAO was asked to summarize the growth of the purchase card 
program, the control weaknesses that led to fraud and misuse of the 
cards, actions taken to tighten controls and discipline cardholders, 
and agency actions to leverage the government’s buying power when 
using the purchase card. In a companion report released today, GAO 
made recommendations to the Office of Management and Budget and 
General Services Administration, and the Departments of Agriculture, 
Defense, Interior, Justice, Transportation, and Veterans Affairs aimed 
at encouraging agencies to begin taking steps to achieve savings 
through better management of purchase card spending. In general, the 
agencies that responded agreed with GAO’s findings and 
recommendations.

What GAO Found:

Governmentwide efforts to promote increased usage of purchase cards 
for small and routine purchases have dramatically increased the number 
of purchase card accounts and spending. The use of a well-controlled 
purchase card program is a useful tool in streamlining the 
government’s acquisition processes and providing agencies flexibility 
to make small and routine purchases. However, improvements in program 
management and oversight could save hundreds of millions of dollars by 
(1) strengthening controls and monitoring transaction activity to 
minimize fraudulent, improper, and abusive purchase card transactions 
and (2) leveraging the government’s buying power to achieve discounts 
with frequently used vendors. 

GAO’s audits of purchase card controls at DOD and four civilian 
agencies and federal agency Inspectors General audits identified 
ineffective management oversight and weak internal controls, leaving 
agencies vulnerable to fraudulent, improper, and abusive purchase card 
activity. GAO’s data mining, forensic audit follow-up, and 
investigations identified numerous purchases of personal items such as 
jewelry, designer leather goods, clothing, stereo equipment, food, and 
entertainment. While agencies responded to these audit reports by 
issuing and updating purchase card policies and procedures, GAO’s work 
at DOD demonstrated that little disciplinary or administrative action 
was taken against those who made improper or abusive charges. 

GAO also found that agencies generally did not take advantage of 
opportunities to obtain more favorable prices on purchase card buys 
with frequently used vendors—vendors where an agency spends more than 
$1 million annually. GAO’s examination of six federal agencies that 
account for over 85 percent of federal government purchase card 
spending identified isolated examples of agencies negotiating 
discounts for items such as office supplies and technology purchases. 
However, a conservative approach indicated that if the six agencies 
obtained discounts of only 10 percent from vendors where they spent 
more than $1 million a year, annual savings of up to $300 million 
could be achieved without sacrificing the ability to acquire items 
quickly or compromising socioeconomic goals. As shown in the following 
table, during fiscal year 2002, these agencies spent nearly $3 billion 
with frequently used vendors. 

Amount Spent in Fiscal Year 2002 with Frequently Used Vendors (in 
Millions): 

Defense: $1,614; 
Veterans Affairs: 822; 
Agriculture: 72; 
Justice: 154; 
Interior: 85; 
Transportation: 74; 
Total: $2,821. 

Source: GAO analysis.

[End of table]

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-717T. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click 
on the link above. For more information, contact Gregory Kutz at (202) 
512-9095 or kutzg@gao.gov. 

[End of section]

Madam Chairman and Members of the Committee:

Thank you for the opportunity to discuss the status of fraud, waste, 
and abuse in the federal government's purchase card program, 
improvements made, and opportunities for savings. Our testimony is 
based on findings from our report[Footnote 1] released today, which was 
requested by this Committee, Senator Russell Feingold, and 
Representative Janice Schakowsky, as well as on findings from numerous 
testimonies and reports that we issued in recent years[Footnote 2] that 
identified significant breakdowns in purchase card controls. The report 
released today looked at whether the six federal agencies with the 
largest purchase card spending have effectively leveraged the 
government's buying power. Our prior reports and testimonies assessed 
controls and vulnerability to fraudulent, improper, and abusive use of 
the purchase card at the Departments of Defense (DOD), Education, and 
Housing and Urban Development (HUD); the Federal Aviation 
Administration (FAA); and the USDA Forest Service. Our work was 
performed between September 2000 and January 2004 in accordance with 
generally accepted government auditing standards.

For a number of years, the federal government promoted increased use of 
purchase cards primarily for small and routine purchases, and use of 
purchase cards has dramatically increased. The General Services 
Administration (GSA) reported that in fiscal year 2003 more than 
325,000 cardholders used purchase cards to make about 26.5 million 
transactions for over $16.4 billion in goods and services. Purchase 
card transactions include acquisitions at or below the $2,500 
micropurchase[Footnote 3] limit and payments on contracts. The benefits 
of using purchase cards versus traditional contracting and payment 
processes are lower transaction processing costs and less 
administrative effort or "red tape" for both the government and the 
vendor community.

Our testimony today has five sections:

* growth of purchase card usage in the federal government;

* control weaknesses that led to fraudulent, improper, and abuse 
purchases;

* limited disciplinary actions taken for misuse of the purchase card;

* steps taken to improve purchase card internal controls; and:

* governmentwide opportunities to save hundreds of millions of dollars 
by leveraging buying power.

Summary:

We support the use of a well-controlled purchase card program to 
streamline the federal acquisition processes. However, improved 
management oversight and internal control will be critical to fully 
realize the potential benefits of the purchase card. The purchase card 
offers significant benefits to the federal government from reduced 
transaction processing costs and increased flexibility to make small, 
routine purchases. Recognizing these benefits, federal agencies quickly 
expanded the use of the purchase card program from about $1 billion in 
fiscal year 1994 to over $16 billion in fiscal year 2003. During this 
substantial growth period, hundreds of thousands of purchase cards were 
issued to employees across the federal government, with a peak of 
500,000 cards outstanding in fiscal year 2000.

While agency management made significant efforts to promote increased 
use of the purchase card, we and Inspectors General across the 
government determined that purchase card management oversight and 
internal control were ineffective. A weak overall control environment 
and significant breakdowns in key internal control activities left 
federal agencies across the government vulnerable to fraudulent, 
improper, and abusive use of the purchase card. Our data mining, 
forensic audit follow-up, and investigations identified cardholder 
fraud, vendor fraud, and fraud due to compromised accounts. We found 
numerous purchases of personal items, such as jewelry, designer leather 
goods, clothing, stereo equipment, food, and entertainment charged to 
government purchase cards. In addition, we identified examples of 
vendors that have exploited control weaknesses to submit fraudulent 
bills that, in some cases, were not detected by cardholders or 
approving official review and thus were paid by agencies. Our work at 
DOD demonstrated that unless a cardholder has been convicted of fraud 
by a court of law, little disciplinary or administrative action is 
taken against those who have made improper or abusive charges.

As a result of our audits and those conducted by agency Inspectors 
General, executive branch agency focus on the development and 
implementation of effective internal controls has increased 
substantially. For example, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 
directed executive branch agencies to increase monitoring of the 
purchase card program and the Congress included language in DOD's 
fiscal year 2003 authorization and appropriation acts requiring DOD and 
the military services to take positive steps to improve the controls 
over the purchase card program. In addition, DOD and other executive 
branch agencies have issued revised purchase card policies and 
procedures, retrained cardholders and approving officials on the proper 
use of purchase cards, and substantially reduced the number of purchase 
card accounts from about 500,000 in September 2000 to about 315,000 in 
January 2004. These actions better articulate what the purchase card 
can and cannot be used for and improve the control environment and the 
design of key internal controls. If implemented effectively, these 
recent actions should significantly reduce the risk of fraudulent, 
improper, and abusive use of the purchase card. It is important to note 
that while DOD and civilian agencies have instituted numerous program 
improvements, we have not performed comprehensive audit and 
investigative work to verify whether these improvements are operating 
as intended.

While substantial attention has been focused on internal controls in 
recent years, very little management focus and attention has been 
placed on the aggressive pursuit of savings through use of the purchase 
card. As discussed in our report released today,[Footnote 4] increased 
focus on negotiating discounts and leveraging the government's over $16 
billion in purchase card spending could result in hundreds of millions 
of tax dollars saved each year. Based on our examination of six federal 
agencies that account for over 85 percent of federal government 
purchase card spending, we found that most agencies have not identified 
and taken advantage of opportunities to obtain more favorable prices on 
purchase card buys. However, we did identify examples where agencies 
effectively negotiated discounts for items, such as office supplies and 
technology purchases. For these agencies, notable savings of 8 percent 
to 35 percent less than GSA's Federal Supply Schedule (Schedule) 
contracts were achieved. A conservative approach indicates that if the 
agencies that we audited obtained discounts of only 10 percent from 
their major purchase card vendors--those vendors where the government 
spends more than $1 million a year--annual savings of up to $300 
million might be achieved.[Footnote 5] These savings could be achieved 
without sacrificing the ability to acquire items quickly or 
compromising socioeconomic goals.

Significant Growth of the Federal Purchase Card Program:

The governmentwide purchase card program was established in 1989 to 
streamline federal agency acquisition processes by providing an 
efficient vehicle for obtaining goods and services directly from 
vendors without first preparing a contract or purchase order. GSA, 
which manages the purchase card program governmentwide, has awarded 
contracts to banks to provide standard commercial charge cards for use 
by federal employees. Use of the purchase card was initially restricted 
to procurement personnel. The Federal Acquisition Streamlining Act of 
1994 (FASA) authorized cardholders to make micropurchases without 
obtaining competitive quotations, if they considered the price 
reasonable, and directed that purchases be distributed equitably among 
qualified suppliers.[Footnote 6] The act also provided authority to 
delegate procurement authority to cardholders who are not procurement 
officials. The Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) designates the 
purchase card as the preferred method of making 
micropurchases.[Footnote 7]

Since the passage of FASA, the dollar value of goods and services 
acquired through the purchase card has increased significantly. As 
shown in figure 1, the amount the government spent with purchase cards 
increased from about $1 billion in fiscal year 1994 to more than $16 
billion in fiscal year 2003.

Figure 1: Purchase Card Expenditures--Fiscal Years 1994 to 2003:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

As the purchase card program expanded during the 1990s, the number of 
cardholders increased in roughly the same proportion as expenditures 
increased. In the late 1990s, senior DOD management mandated the use of 
purchase cards for virtually all micropurchases, and cited an Army 
Audit Agency study that found that the purchase card provided 
administrative cost savings of $92 per transaction compared to using 
purchase orders. DOD estimated that increased use of the purchase card 
would save DOD millions of dollars in annual processing costs and that 
the savings could be used to modernize and maintain our fighting 
forces.

GSA--whose mission includes helping federal agencies better serve the 
public by offering acquisition services at the best value--has created 
several tools that can help cardholders obtain more favorable pricing 
for goods and services. The most common of these is the Schedule 
program, which offers discounted prices on a wide range of commercial 
goods and services from multiple vendors.[Footnote 8] Further, the GSA 
Advantage on-line shopping service allows agencies to compare prices 
under various Schedule contracts, place orders, and make payments--all 
over the Internet.

Control Weaknesses Led to Fraudulent, Improper, and Abusive Purchases:

We and Inspectors General across the government found ineffective 
management oversight and internal control over purchase card use. A 
weak overall control environment and substantial breakdowns in internal 
control left agencies vulnerable to fraudulent,[Footnote 9] 
improper,[Footnote 10]and abusive[Footnote 11] charges. The importance 
of the role of management in establishing a strong control environment 
cannot be overstated. GAO's Standards for Internal Control[Footnote 12] 
discuss management's key role in demonstrating and maintaining an 
organization's integrity and ethical values, especially in setting and 
maintaining the organization's ethical tone, providing guidance for 
proper behavior, and removing temptations for unethical behavior.

Agencies Had Not Established a Strong Control Environment:

In establishing their purchase card programs, we found that the federal 
agencies that we audited primarily focused on maximizing the use of the 
purchase card, paying bills quickly, and developing performance 
measures for these activities. Agency purchase card managers did not 
equally focus their attention on establishing a strong control 
environment that promoted adherence to internal control procedures, and 
they did not develop performance measures to assess the adequacy of 
internal control activities. Rather, the only real metrics in place for 
purchase cards were related to the timeliness of payments and 
maximizing purchase card rebates.[Footnote 13] Consequently, at the 
agencies we audited, we found an ineffective overall internal control 
environment. Specifically, we found that agencies generally did not 
effectively (1) control the number of purchase cards issued, (2) limit 
approving officials' responsibilities to a reasonable number of 
purchase cardholders, (3) limit purchase card credit limits to 
historical procurement needs, (4) ensure that cardholders and approving 
officials were properly trained on the proper use of the purchase card, 
and (5) monitor and maintain an infrastructure necessary to effectively 
oversee the purchase card program.

* Proliferation of Cardholders. Agencies that we audited often did not 
have specific policies and procedures governing the number of cards 
issued or established criteria for identifying employees eligible for 
the privilege of cardholder status. The failure to establish effective 
policy concerning the number of cardholders necessary to accomplish the 
mission and who should be a cardholder resulted in a proliferation of 
purchase cards at DOD and other federal agencies. We reported that one 
DOD unit issued purchase cards to about 36 percent of its employees and 
an FAA office had issued cards to about half of its employees. Further, 
when the number of governmentwide cardholders peaked in September 
2000[Footnote 14] at about 500,000 cardholders, nearly 16 percent of 
government employees had a purchase card. In comparison, information we 
obtained from six large defense contractors on their purchase card 
programs showed that the percent of the contractors' employees that 
were cardholders ranged from about 2 percent to nearly 4 percent--
significantly less than the governmentwide peak of about 16 percent and 
the current rate of about 10 percent of government employees.

* Unreasonable Approving Official Span of Control. At the agencies we 
audited, we found that some approving officials were responsible for 
review and approval of excessive numbers of monthly cardholder 
statements. The proliferation of cardholders can create a situation 
where it is virtually impossible to maintain a positive control 
environment if the agencies do not establish a sufficient number of 
approving officials to review cardholder spending activities. For 
example, we reported that at one DOD unit a significant span of control 
issue existed with one approving official responsible for certifying 
monthly summary billing statements covering an average of over 700 
monthly purchase card statements relating to 1,526 purchase 
cardholders. We also reported that HUD did not have a complete and 
accurate list of approving officials and the cardholders assigned to 
them. The span of control issue, along with effective implementation of 
an approving official review function, are particularly important for 
the integrity of purchase card program because supervisors and, in some 
cases, cardholders themselves, are responsible for authorizing 
purchases, rather than an independent contracting officer as is the 
case under the standard procurement process. Thus, the approving 
official serves as a key control in certifying cardholder purchases.

* Cardholder Credit Limits Exceed Procurement Needs. The total 
financial exposure of the purchase card program is measured in terms of 
purchase card credit limits. Limiting credit available to cardholders 
is a key factor in managing the purchase card program and in minimizing 
the government's financial exposure. None of the agencies that we 
audited tied either the cardholder's or the approving official's credit 
limit to the unit's historical spending. Rather, they generally 
established arbitrary credit limits of $10,000 to $25,000. In some 
instances, we found cardholders and approving officials who had credit 
limits that far exceeded historical spending needs. For example, we 
reported that 60 Navy cardholders each had credit limits of $9.9 
million, and more than 2,300 Navy approving officials each had $9.9 
million credit limits. By managing credit limits, the government's 
exposure to fraudulent usage of the card is limited.

* Agencies Lacked Evidence that Purchase Card Officials Were Trained. 
We found a lack of documented evidence that cardholders and approving 
officials were adequately trained. GAO's internal control standards 
emphasize that effective management of an organization's workforce--its 
human capital--is essential to achieving results and is an important 
part of internal control. Training is key to ensuring that the 
workforce has the skills necessary to achieve organizational goals. 
While agencies we audited required all cardholders and approving 
officials to receive initial and refresher purchase card training, all 
of the agencies lacked documentation to verify that all cardholders and 
approving officials had received the required training. For example, at 
one FAA field office we found no evidence that 38 percent of the 
cardholders and 67 percent of the approving officials had received 
purchase card training since 1996--a 5-year gap.

* Insufficient Human Capital Resources. Most agencies that we audited 
had not provided sufficient human capital resources to enable effective 
monitoring of purchases and to develop a robust oversight program. The 
key positions for monitoring purchases are the department-level agency 
program coordinator, the bureau or agency-level program coordinator, 
and the local approving official. At DOD, none of the major commands 
that we audited had agency program coordinators who worked full time in 
that position. This is despite the fact that some agency program 
coordinators were responsible for managing procurement programs that 
incurred between 227,000 and 380,000 transactions totaling from about 
$137 million to about $268 million annually. We also found that the 
major commands did not provide the subordinate level agency program 
coordinators and approving officials with the time, training, tools, or 
incentives--also human capital resources--needed to perform monitoring 
responsibilities necessary for the operational success of the program. 
The responsibilities of approving officials and many subordinate level 
agency program coordinators fell into the category of "other duties as 
assigned.":

Key Internal Controls Were Ineffective:

Key internal controls over the purchase card program were ineffective 
at the agencies we audited. We determined that DOD and the four 
civilian agencies had weaknesses in key transaction-level controls 
leaving the agencies vulnerable to fraudulent, improper, and abusive 
purchases and to the theft and misuse of government property. The 
problems we found primarily resulted from inadequate guidance and a 
lack of adherence to valid policies and procedures. The specific 
controls that we tested were (1) documenting independent receipt and 
acceptance of goods and services, (2) documenting cardholder 
reconciliation and approving official review prior to certifying 
monthly purchase card statements for payment, (3) screening for 
required vendors, and (4) recording pilferable property in accountable 
records.

* Independent Receipt and Acceptance of Items Purchased. Most agencies 
that we audited generally did not have evidence documenting that 
someone independent of the cardholder received and accepted items 
ordered and paid for them with a purchase card. That is, the units 
generally did not have a receipt, invoice, or packing slip for the 
acquired goods and services that was signed and dated by someone other 
than the cardholder. As a result, there was no documented evidence that 
the government received the items purchased or that those items were 
not lost, stolen, or misused. For example, we reported that three Navy 
cardholders took advantage of this weakness and fraudulently purchased 
$500,000 of items for themselves before they were caught.

* Reconciling and Reviewing Monthly Statements. At the agencies we 
audited, we found little evidence that either cardholders reconciled 
the monthly purchase card invoices back to the supporting documents or 
that an approving official reviewed the cardholder's activity to 
confirm that they had been properly reconciled to the monthly invoices. 
Our testing revealed that documented evidence of adequate cardholder 
reconciliation or approving official review of cardholder transactions 
did not exist for most transactions. We often found that either the 
cardholder and/or the approving official review were simply a "rubber 
stamp." For example, at HUD, we estimated that $4.8 million of a $10.6 
million sample population lacked adequate supporting documentation for 
the approving official to determine the validity of the purchases.

* Screening for Required Vendors. Despite govermentwide requirements to 
give priority to certain preferred vendors, we have reported that most 
agencies that we audited did not document whether the necessary 
screening occurred. Due to the lack of documentation, agencies did not 
know the extent to which cardholders acquired items from these vendors. 
Most agencies require that prior to using the purchase card, 
cardholders must document that they have screened all their intended 
purchase card acquisitions for availability from statutory sources of 
supply. These sources of supply include the Federal Prison Industries, 
Inc., known as UNICOR, and vendors qualifying under the Javits-Wagner-
O'Day Act (JWOD). JWOD vendors are nonprofit agencies that employ 
people who are blind or have other severe disabilities. JWOD vendors 
primarily sell office supplies and calendars that often cost less than 
similar items sold by commercial vendors. Our DOD and civilian agency 
audits found tens of millions of dollars of purchase card transactions 
that did not follow statutory or agency source of supply guidelines.

* Accountability for Pilferable Items. All of the agencies we audited 
had difficulty ensuring that sensitive and pilferable property acquired 
with purchase cards were recorded in property records. In addition, 
none of the agencies could locate every property item invoiced in our 
statistical samples. Because agency officials could not provide 
conclusive evidence that missing property was in the possession of the 
government, they could not determine whether these items were lost or 
stolen. For example, the Department of Education could not locate 241 
personal computers and related equipment valued at $261,500 acquired 
using purchase cards. GAO's Standards for Internal Control state that 
accountable property should be recorded in property records as it is 
acquired. Accountable property obtained with purchase cards includes 
items that can be easily pilfered, such as computers and related 
equipment, and cameras. Entering such items in the property records and 
performing periodic inventories are important steps to help assure 
accountability and financial control over these assets and deter theft 
or improper use of government property.

Limited Disciplinary Actions Taken by DOD:

As previously mentioned, at the request of the House and Senate Defense 
Authorization and Appropriations Committees, we followed up with DOD to 
determine what disciplinary or administrative actions were taken 
against the cardholders we had cited in our examples of fraudulent, 
improper, or abusive purchases in our DOD purchase card reports and 
testimonies. Specifically, we listed 51 examples of cardholders who had 
used the government purchase card to make fraudulent or potentially 
fraudulent purchases and 120 examples of cardholders who made improper 
and abusive or questionable purchases. We reported that when a court of 
law determined that a cardholder fraudulently used the purchase card, 
all the military services generally took strong disciplinary actions 
(such as, assessed fines, and in the case of uniformed personnel, 
sentenced the individual to jail/confinement). We also found that the 
military services either took strong disciplinary action or were 
actively investigating the cases we reported as potentially fraudulent. 
For example, our two Navy reports identified 26 fraudulent and 
potentially fraudulent transactions totaling more than $1,342,000. The 
Navy reported that in response, it fired six cardholders, reduced the 
grade of others, confined several uniformed serviceman for periods of 
14 to 60 months, and required repayment to the government of over 
$460,000. Other actions taken on fraudulent or potentially fraudulent 
transactions included suspending or revoking purchase card privileges, 
requiring repayment to the government for the cost of the items 
obtained, returning items obtained to the government, and issuing 
written reprimands.

However, the military services generally did not take disciplinary or 
administrative actions against the 120 cardholders associated with our 
examples of improper, abusive, or questionable transactions. As shown 
in table 1, using our examples of problem transactions, DOD disciplined 
only 20 of the 120 cardholders we cited as examples in our reports. DOD 
revoked the purchase card privileges of 8 of the cardholders we cited, 
gave verbal or written reprimands to 3 cardholders, required the items 
obtained by 7 cardholders to be returned to the government, and gave 2 
cardholders verbal reprimand and required them to return the item to 
the government. DOD did not take any action against 94 of the 120 
examples that we identified. We noted that DOD required 33 of these 94 
cardholders to take purchase card training. Because all cardholders are 
required to take periodic training, we did not consider retraining to 
be a disciplinary action.

Table 1: Disciplinary Actions Taken against DOD Cardholders Who Made 
Improper, Abusive, or Questionable Transactions:

Type of disciplinary action taken: Value of transactions reported by 
GAO; Total: $3,062,445.

Type of disciplinary action taken: Number of transactions reported by 
GAO; Total: 120.

Type of disciplinary action taken: Give item to government or repay 
for cost of improper, abusive, or questionable charge; Total: 73.

Type of disciplinary action taken: Written or verbal reprimand; Total: 
3.

Type of disciplinary action taken: Credit card revocation or 
suspension; Total: 8.

Type of disciplinary action taken: Verbal reprimand and required to 
return the item to the government; Total: 2.

Total disciplinary actions: 20.

No disciplinary actions; Total: 94.

Still under review/investigation or written policy authorizing 
purchase; Total: 6.

Source: GAO analysis of responses provided by Army, Navy, and Air 
Force.

[End of table]

Table 2 shows examples of abusive and wasteful items identified in our 
statistical samples, data mining, and forensic auditing, that 
government cardholders charged to their purchase cards. It is 
important to note that none of the cardholders were disciplined for 
using tax dollars to pay for personal items.

Table 2: Examples of Abusive and Wasteful Items Obtained with a 
Purchase Card Reported By GAO:

Item purchased: Coach brief cases, $400-$500 each; Justification 
provided to GAO auditors and investigators: More durable than standard 
briefcases; Action taken: None.

Item purchased: Mounted deer head; Justification provided to GAO 
auditors and investigators: Educate airmen about local deer 
population; Action taken: None.

Item purchased: $250 Louis Vuitton designer folios; Justification 
provided to GAO auditors and investigators: Personal preference; 
Action taken: None.

Item purchased: $100 Dooney and Bourke designer PDA cases; 
Justification provided to GAO auditors and investigators: Personal 
preference; Action taken: None.

Item purchased: Luggage; Justification provided to GAO auditors and 
investigators: DOD personnel were traveling on official business; 
Action taken: None.

Item purchased: Garment bags; Justification provided to GAO auditors 
and investigators: DOD personnel were traveling on official business; 
Action taken: None.

Item purchased: $224 leather backpack; Justification provided to GAO 
auditors and investigators: To hold items while traveling; Action 
taken: None.

Item purchased: $300 Bose headset; Justification provided to GAO 
auditors and investigators: Traveler would be more rested after long 
flights; Action taken: None.

Item purchased: $500 Bose wave radio; Justification provided to GAO 
auditors and investigators: Cardholder wanted a radio for his office; 
Action taken: None.

Item purchased: Wine; Justification provided to GAO auditors and 
investigators: Authorized by a "competent authority in the course of 
execution of a highly classified compartmented program."; Action 
taken: None.

Item purchased: Cigars; Justification provided to GAO auditors and 
investigators: Gifts to be given to very important people; Action 
taken: None.

Item purchased: Leather bomber jackets; Justification provided to GAO 
auditors and investigators: Personal preference; Action taken: None.

Item purchased: Ski clothing; Justification provided to GAO auditors 
and investigators: A DOD civilian was traveling to cold weather area; 
Action taken: None.

Item purchased: Oakley sun glasses; Justification provided to GAO 
auditors and investigators: Entitlement; Action taken: None.

Item purchased: $200 Lego toy robots; Justification provided to GAO 
auditors and investigators: Teach Navy engineers about robotics; 
Action taken: None.

Source: GAO analysis of agency purchase card invoices and supporting 
documentation. 

[End of table]

Steps Taken to Improve Management of the Purchase Card Program:

In response to the reported breakdowns in internal controls and 
fraudulent, improper, and abusive purchases, the Office of Management 
and Budget (OMB), Congress, DOD, and civilian agencies have taken 
numerous actions to improve management oversight and internal controls 
over the government purchase card program. Specifically, OMB requested 
all agencies to review the adequacy of internal controls for purchase 
card expenditures, prepare separate remedial action plans for control 
weaknesses, and submit quarterly reports on purchase card activity. The 
Congress directed DOD to improve the management of the purchase card 
program in the fiscal year 2003 DOD authorization and appropriations 
acts. In response to OMB and congressional actions and GAO and 
Inspectors General reports, DOD and civilian agencies updated policies 
and procedures to strengthen purchase card program controls.

Office of Management and Budget Actions:

On April 18, 2002, OMB issued a memorandum to executive branch agencies 
stating that the fraudulent and unauthorized use of government credit 
cards identified by GAO and Inspectors General was unacceptable and 
required prompt and effective remedial action. In the memorandum, OMB 
requested that each agency review the adequacy of internal controls for 
purchase card expenditures and prepare separate remedial action plans 
for its purchase and travel card programs. The remedial action plans 
were to highlight the problems each agency identified, the internal 
controls that will be used to manage risk associated with these 
programs (such as, management oversight and review, authorized spending 
limits, and training), and include an examination of the number of 
cards issued at the agency. OMB recommended that agencies deactivate 
all current cards and reactivate them selectively for a smaller number 
of cardholders, based on demonstrated necessity. According to the OMB 
memorandum, if the program was to continue, agencies must improve the 
internal control over the purchase card program. In October 2002, OMB 
issued a memorandum requiring federal agencies to prepare and submit 
quarterly reports on purchase card activity beginning with the first 
quarter of 2003.

Legislative Actions:

The Congress included in DOD's fiscal year 2003 authorization and 
appropriations acts[Footnote 15] requirements for DOD to take specific 
actions to improve the management of the purchase card program, in 
particular, the weaknesses we identified. Specifically, these acts 
required DOD to (1) limit the number of purchase cards, (2) train 
purchase card officials, (3) monitor purchase card activity, (4) review 
purchase card activity to better aggregate purchases and obtain lower 
prices, (5) establish guidelines and procedures to discipline 
cardholders who misuse the purchase card, and (6) assess the credit 
worthiness of cardholders. By the end of fiscal year 2003, DOD and the 
military services initiated actions to address these requirements. DOD 
made significant progress by taking the following steps:

* DOD reduced the total number of purchase cards from about 239,000 in 
March 2001 to about 135,000 in January 2004[Footnote 16] and 
established a maximum ratio of cardholders to approving officials of 7 
to 1.

* DOD made available several on-line, self-paced purchase card courses 
on its Defense Acquisition University Web site. DOD's on-line 
curriculum included courses for cardholders and approving officials on 
regulatory requirements and other guidelines related to the purchase 
card program, and a GSA module aimed at providing advanced training for 
agency program coordinators who have completed basic training on the 
purchase card program.

* DOD also increased its monitoring of purchase card transactions. 
DOD's Office of the Inspector General and the Navy prototyped a data 
mining capability to screen for and identify high-risk purchase card 
transactions (such as potentially fraudulent, improper, and abusive use 
of the cards, including prohibited purchases) for subsequent 
investigation. On June 27, 2003, the DOD Inspector General issued a 
report[Footnote 17] summarizing the results of an in-depth review of 
purchase card transactions made by 1,357 purchase cardholders. Using 
data mining technology, the report identified 182 cardholders who may 
have inappropriately or fraudulently used their purchase cards.

In several other cases DOD and the military services have issued 
policies and guidelines for implementing the legislative mandates. 
However, sufficient time has not passed to implement the legislative 
mandate. For example:

* DOD issued separate disciplinary guidelines[Footnote 18] for civilian 
and military employees intended to ensure that management emphasis is 
given to the important issue of personal accountability. However, DOD 
told us in response to our December 2003 report,[Footnote 19] DOD does 
not intend to monitor whether commanders are consistently applying 
those guidelines.

* DOD established a senior focus group consisting of acquisition, 
financial management, and general counsel executives to determine how 
to implement the requirement to evaluate an individual's credit 
worthiness. The focus group concluded that there are conflicts between 
implementing this legislation through the use of credit checks and the 
Fair Credit Reporting Act. The department is pursuing an alternative 
solution that would rely on a self-certification process by prospective 
cardholders and is researching the legality and practicality of the 
alternative.

DOD Action on GAO Recommendations:

Recently, we reported[Footnote 20] that the Army, Navy, and Air Force 
have either completed or initiated actions to implement nearly all of 
the 109 recommendations we made to improve the management of the 
purchase card program. The recommendations that the services told us 
they have implemented closely tie to requirements in the DOD fiscal 
year 2003 authorization and appropriation acts. However, DOD had not 
fully implemented the recommendations dealing with leveraging purchase 
card buying power; establishing servicewide databases for data mining; 
investigating suspected and known fraud; and linking cardholder, 
approving official, and agency program coordinator performance 
appraisals to performance standards encompassing purchase card goals 
and objectives. The Air Force planned to complete action on all of the 
recommendations by the spring of 2004. The Army and the Navy did not 
provide target dates for completing actions that are underway to 
address our recommendations.

Agencies Can Achieve Significant Savings on Purchase Card Buys:

As we discuss in the report released today, substantial attention has 
been focused on internal controls in recent years, but very little 
management focus and attention has been placed on the aggressive 
pursuit of savings through use of the purchase card.[Footnote 21] 
Although some agencies have begun to take actions to achieve such 
savings through their purchase card programs, most have not identified 
nor taken advantage of opportunities to obtain more favorable prices 
from their major purchase card vendors--opportunities that could yield 
hundreds of millions of dollars in savings. A conservative approach 
indicates that the agencies we reviewed--Agriculture, Army, Navy, Air 
Force, Interior, Justice, Transportation, and Veterans Affairs--might 
be able to achieve annual savings on the order of $300 million. In our 
view, these savings could be achieved without sacrificing the ability 
to acquire items quickly or compromising socioeconomic goals.

Agencies Generally Have Not Taken Advantage of Opportunities to Obtain 
Savings:

Although we found some initiatives under way to obtain vendor discounts 
from major purchase card vendors, agencies generally had not seized 
opportunities to obtain more favorable prices on purchase card buys. 
Agency efforts to obtain more favorable prices for purchase cardholders 
had generally been limited to a few agencywide agreements with major 
vendors. Further, training for cardholders usually focused on internal 
controls and regulatory policies and did not provide practical 
information about steps cardholders can take to get better prices. As a 
result, cardholders often paid higher prices than necessary. The 
successful initiatives taken within some agencies demonstrate that, if 
agencies negotiated effective discount agreements with major purchase 
card vendors and improved communications to cardholders about how to 
obtain more favorable prices, significant savings could be realized. 
Some of our major findings regarding this issue include:

* Scope and Coverage of Negotiated Discount Agreements Varied. We found 
a wide variation in the number of agencywide discount agreements that 
the agencies we reviewed had negotiated with their major purchase card 
vendors. For example, Veterans Affairs had negotiated agencywide 
discount agreements with 37 of its 196 major purchase card vendors--the 
largest number of any of the agencies reviewed. In contrast, 
Transportation's senior procurement executive told us his agency had no 
discount agreements that could be used agencywide.

Even where agencies had agreements in place, the agreements did not 
cover all the products and services cardholders were buying. For 
example, Veterans Affairs agreements that we examined covered single 
products or product types--specimen containers, bandages, or 
washcloths--instead of the vendor's full product line. Estimated sales 
for these agreements were as low as $27,000. According to agency 
officials, the intent of the agreements was to standardize specific 
products, and the agency has now identified its highest dollar value 
products for standardization.

* Most Agency Guidance and Training Did Not Provide Practical 
Information on Obtaining Favorable Pricing. Each of the agencies we 
reviewed had developed guidance and training programs for their 
cardholders that focused on regulatory policies and internal controls 
intended to prevent misuse of the purchase card. However, most of the 
guidance and training programs did not provide cardholders with 
practical information to help them get better pricing by using GSA 
Schedule contracts or agency discount agreements. Some locations found 
more practical training beneficial. For example, the Air Force's Air 
Mobility Command developed an extensive briefing that highlights the 
importance of comparison shopping and is providing hands-on training to 
show cardholders how to order from Schedule contracts. Command 
officials told us that in addition to providing cardholders with 
practical tools to help them be effective buyers, the briefings and 
training increased cardholder awareness of the importance of comparison 
shopping.

* Cardholders Paid More Than Necessary. Dun and Bradstreet's analysis 
of fiscal year 2002 Interior transactions, conducted on our behalf, 
illustrates that cardholders frequently paid more than necessary. For 
example, the company analyzed Interior purchases from three office 
supply vendors that provided product descriptions along with their 
purchase card billing information. This analysis showed that ink 
cartridges were the most frequently purchased product. For one specific 
model of ink cartridge, 411 of 791 purchases were made at prices higher 
than the GSA Schedule prices the vendors offered, indicating that 
cardholders had generally not taken advantage of discounts available 
through Schedule contracts. The prices paid for the same cartridge 
model ranged from $20.00 to $34.99.

Some cardholders appeared not to accept any responsibility for getting 
reasonable prices. For example, a Transportation cardholder paid about 
20 percent more than the GSA Schedule contract price for office supply 
items, even though he admitted he knew that the vendor had a Schedule 
contract. An Agriculture cardholder, who paid about 13 percent more for 
cellular telecommunications service than the GSA contract price, told 
us that her only role in the transaction was to pay the monthly bill 
for the cell phone user.

A number of other cardholders purchased items that were not available 
through the vendor's Schedule contract and did not consider whether 
products that met their needs were available from other vendors that 
offered discounted Schedule prices. For example, an Army cardholder 
purchased word-processing software from an office supply vendor's 
retail store and did not consider whether other vendors might offer 
discounts on the same software through their Schedule contracts.

Experience at Some Agencies Suggests That Significant Savings Are 
Possible:

Several agencies reported significant savings from their initiatives to 
leverage buying power by negotiating discount agreements with major 
purchase card vendors, suggesting that the potential exists for 
significant savings governmentwide. For example, Interior recently 
negotiated several agencywide discount agreements for information 
technology products. These agreements provided for savings ranging from 
20 percent to 35 percent for laptop computers. Sales under 
Agriculture's discount agreement for office supplies totaled $15.4 
million during fiscal year 2003, and the agency achieved savings of 
$1.8 million, or about 10 percent off Schedule prices. While the scope 
of our work did not include developing a governmentwide estimate of the 
potential savings from leveraging purchase card buying power, these 
examples indicate that the potential for savings is significant. A 
conservative approach indicates that, if these agencies were to achieve 
savings of just 10 percent on their purchase card expenditures with 
major vendors, annual savings of $300 million could be realized.

Agency officials expressed concerns that achieving these savings might 
require them to sacrifice the ability to acquire items quickly or 
compromise socioeconomic goals. Although agency officials consistently 
identified these challenges, our review suggests that the challenges 
are not insurmountable, as evidenced by the individual agency 
initiatives to address them. The Air Mobility Command, for example, is 
supporting small businesses while generating savings. The Command 
contacted local suppliers--many of which were small businesses--to 
determine what customary trade discounts they were willing to extend to 
government purchase cardholders and provided this information to the 
cardholders. Cardholders were encouraged to request the applicable 
discount, typically about 10 percent, when dealing with these 
suppliers.

Concluding Remarks:

We support the use of a well-managed and controlled purchase card 
program in the federal government. To date, the purchase card has 
provided significant benefits in reduced transaction processing costs 
and increased flexibility for agencies to meet their procurement needs. 
However, ineffective management oversight and control have prevented 
the government from fully realizing the benefits of using the purchase 
card. Although significant progress has been made in improving 
management focus and the design of internal controls, it is too early 
to tell whether controls are in place to provide reasonable assurance 
that fraudulent, improper and abusive purchases are being minimized. 
The federal government has also not effectively leveraged the $16 
billion a year buying power of its purchase card activity. With the 
serious fiscal challenges facing our nation, it is important that the 
hundreds of millions of dollars of potential savings available through 
better management of the purchase card program be realized.

:

Madam Chairman, Members of the Committee, this concludes our prepared 
statement. We would be pleased to answer any questions that you may 
have.

Contacts and Acknowledgments:

For future contacts regarding this testimony, please contact Gregory D. 
Kutz at (202) 512-9095, David E. Cooper at (202) 512-4841, and John J. 
Ryan at (202) 512-9587. Individuals making key contributions to this 
testimony included Mario Artesiano, Francine DelVecchio, Bonnie Derby, 
Gayle Fischer, John Kelly, Michele Mackin, Monty Peters, Alana 
Stanfield, Edward Tanaka, and Bernard Trescavage.

[End of section]

Related GAO Products:

[End of section]

Products concerning purchase card internal controls:

Purchase Cards: Steps Taken to Improve DOD Program Management, but 
Actions Needed to Address Misuse 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-156]. 

Audit Guide: Auditing and Investigating the Internal Control of 
Government Purchase Card Programs 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-87G]. 

Forest Service Purchase Cards: Internal Control Weaknesses Resulted 
in Instances of Improper, Wasteful, and Questionable Purchases
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-786]. 

HUD Purchase Cards: Poor Internal Controls Resulted in Improper and 
Questionable Purchases 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-489]. 

Data Mining: Results and Challenges for Government Program Audits and 
Investigations 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO- 03-591T]. 

FAA Purchase Cards: Weak Controls Resulted in Instances of Improper 
and Wasteful Purchases and Missing Assets 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-405]. 

Purchase Cards: Control Weaknesses Leave the Air Force Vulnerable to 
Fraud, Waste, and Abuse 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-292]. 

Purchase Cards: Navy Vulnerable to Fraud and Abuse but is Taking 
Action to Resolve Control Weaknesses 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-154T]. 

Purchase Cards: Navy Is Vulnerable to Fraud and Abuse but Is Taking 
Action to Resolve Control Weaknesses 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-1041]. 

Purchase Cards: Control Weaknesses Leave Army Vulnerable to Fraud, 
Waste, and Abuse 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-844T]. 

Purchase Cards: Control Weaknesses Leave Army Vulnerable to Fraud, 
Waste, and Abuse 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO- 02-732]. 

FAA Alaska: Weak Controls Resulted in Improper and Wasteful Purchases 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-606]. 

Government Purchase Cards: Control Weaknesses Expose Agencies to Fraud 
and Abuse. 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-676T]. 

Education Financial Management: Weak Internal Controls Led to 
Instances of Fraud and Other Improper Payments 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-406]. 

Purchase Cards: Control Weaknesses Leave Two Navy Units Vulnerable to 
Fraud and Abuse 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-506T]. 

Purchase Cards: Control Weaknesses Leave Two Navy Units Vulnerable to 
Fraud and Abuse 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-32]. 

Purchase Cards: Control Weaknesses Leave Two Navy Units Vulnerable to 
Fraud and Abuse 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-01-995T]. 

Products concerning strategic purchasing:

Contract Management: Agencies Can Achieve Significant Savings on 
Purchase Card Buys 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-430]. 

Contract Management: Restructuring GSA's Federal Supply Service and 
Federal Technology Service 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-132T]. 

Best Practices: Improved Knowledge of DOD Service Contracts Could 
Reveal Significant Savings 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-661]. 

Contract Management: Taking a Strategic Approach to Improving Service 
Acquisitions 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-499T]. 

Best Practices: Taking a Strategic Approach Could Improve DOD's 
Acquisition of Services 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-02-230]. 
 


(192129):

FOOTNOTES

[1] U.S. General Accounting Office, Contract Management: Agencies Can 
Achieve Significant Savings on Purchase Card Buys, GAO-04-430 
(Washington, D.C.: Mar. 12, 2004).

[2] A list of related GAO products is included at the end of this 
statement.

[3] 48 C.F.R. § 2.101 (2003). However, the limit is $2,000 for certain 
construction costs and $15,000 for supplies or services related to the 
defense against or recovery from nuclear, biological, chemical, or 
radiological attack. 48 C.F.R. § 13.201 (2003).

[4] GAO-04-430. 

[5] The six agencies' spending with major vendors totaled about $3 
billion in fiscal year 2002.

[6] Pub. L. No. 103-355, § 4301, 108 Stat. 3243, 3346 (Oct. 13, 1994).

[7] 48 C.F.R. § 13.201(b) (2003). Further, FAR Subpart13.301 
establishes guidelines for the use and management of the purchase card.

[8] Although GSA negotiates discounted prices with various vendors on 
behalf of government agencies, the GSA Inspector General has raised 
concerns as to whether GSA is negotiating the best possible prices. In 
addition, at the request of this committee we are also assessing 
whether GSA is negotiating the best possible prices.

[9] Fraudulent purchases include charges made by cardholders that were 
unauthorized and intended for personal use or unauthorized transactions 
made by third parties. 

[10] Improper purchases are those purchases intended for government 
use, but not for a purpose that is permitted by law, regulation, or 
agency policy.

[11] Abusive transactions include those that were authorized, but in 
which the items were purchased at an excessive cost (e.g., "gold 
plated") or for a questionable government need, or both. Abuse can 
occur even though no law or regulation is violated. Rather, abuse also 
occurs when the conduct of a government organization, program, 
activity, or function falls short of societal expectations of prudent 
behavior. 

[12] U.S. General Accounting Office, Standards for Internal Control in 
the Federal Government, GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 
1999).

[13] Under federal agency purchase card task orders with credit card 
issuing banks, agencies earn rebates (refunds) based on the sales 
volume (purchases) and the timeliness of their payments. 

[14] According to General Services Administration data.  

[15] Bob Stump National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2003, 
Pub. L. No. 107-314, 116 Stat. 2458 (Dec. 2, 2002) and Department of 
Defense Appropriations Act, 2003, Pub. L. No. 107-248, 116 Stat. 1519 
(Oct. 23, 2002).

[16] According to GSA.

[17] Department of Defense, Office of the Inspector General, Summary 
Report on Joint Review of Selected DOD Purchase Card Transactions, 
D2003-109 (Washington, D.C.: June 27, 2003). 

[18] Military employees are subject to the Uniformed Code of Military 
Justice.

[19] U.S. General Accounting Office Purchase Cards DOD: Steps Taken to 
Improve DOD Program Management, but Actions Needed to Address Misuse, 
GAO-04-156 (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 2, 2003.).

[20] GAO-04-156. 

[21] GAO-04-430.