This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-10-97 
entitled 'Federally Created Entities: An Overview of Key Attributes' 
which was released on December 2, 2009. 

This text file was formatted by the U.S. Government Accountability 
Office (GAO) to be accessible to users with visual impairments, as part 
of a longer term project to improve GAO products' accessibility. Every 
attempt has been made to maintain the structural and data integrity of 
the original printed product. Accessibility features, such as text 
descriptions of tables, consecutively numbered footnotes placed at the 
end of the file, and the text of agency comment letters, are provided 
but may not exactly duplicate the presentation or format of the printed 
version. The portable document format (PDF) file is an exact electronic 
replica of the printed version. We welcome your feedback. Please E-mail 
your comments regarding the contents or accessibility features of this 
document to Webmaster@gao.gov. 

This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright 
protection in the United States. It may be reproduced and distributed 
in its entirety without further permission from GAO. Because this work 
may contain copyrighted images or other material, permission from the 
copyright holder may be necessary if you wish to reproduce this 
material separately. 

Report to the Ranking Member, Committee on Finance, U.S. Senate: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

October 2009: 

Federally Created Entities: 

An Overview of Key Attributes: 

GAO-10-97: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-10-97, a report to the Ranking Member, Committee on 
Finance, U.S. Senate. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Over the years, Congress has created or authorized the creation of 
numerous entities to carry out federal programs and further public 
purposes. These federally created entities can be categorized into 
several types and serve a variety of missions. They are subject to 
varying governance, accountability, and transparency requirements 
through which Congress sought to strengthen entity operations, 
compliance, performance and resource accountability, and public access 
to information. Collectively, these entities receive trillions of 
dollars annually in funds appropriated by Congress. 

Given the wide variety of entity types, applicability of key broad-
based requirements, and federal funding, the committee asked GAO to (1) 
identify and categorize federally created entities by type; (2) 
determine the extent to which the various entity types are generally 
subject to key broad-based statutory governance, accountability, and 
transparency requirements we identified; and (3) determine the amount 
of appropriations Congress has made directly available to each of the 
individual entities in recent years (fiscal years 2005 through 2008). 

To answer these questions, GAO reviewed federal statutes and 
regulations, previous GAO and Congressional Research Service reports, 
data on appropriated funds and other budget authority maintained by the 
Office of Management and Budget, and other relevant manuals, literature 
and Web sites. 

What GAO Found: 

GAO identified 219 federally created entities with varied control, 
missions, and operations. These entities, which GAO categorized into 7 
types, are not universally subject to the 12 key broad-based 
governance, accountability, and transparency requirements reviewed for 
this report. These requirements are: budget preparation, review, and 
approval; strategic and performance planning; budget execution and 
funds control; control of improper payments; internal control and 
accounting systems; preparing and reporting of audited financial 
statements; standards of conduct; whistleblower protection; access to 
public records; availability of federal contract and grant information; 
and access to public meetings. For fiscal years 2005 through 2008, 
Congress appropriated, on average, about $4 trillion a year in federal 
funds to 129 of the federally created entities in 4 of the 7 entity 
types. The table summarizes GAO’s results. 

Table: Applicability of Requirements, Number of Identified Entities, 
and Percentage of Appropriated Federal Funds by Entity Type: 

Entity type: Executive departments; 
General applicability of requirements: Almost all; 
Number of identified entities: 15; 
Entities directly receiving appropriated funds: 15; 
Percent of average annual appropriated funds to identified entities: 
73.6%. 

Entity type: Other executive branch entities; 
General applicability of requirements: Almost all; 
Number of identified entities: 88; 
Entities directly receiving appropriated funds: 79; 
Percent of average annual appropriated funds to identified entities: 
24.8%. 

Entity type: Government corporations; 
General applicability of requirements: Most; 
Number of identified entities: 23; 
Entities directly receiving appropriated funds: 18; 
Percent of average annual appropriated funds to identified entities: 
1.5%. 

Entity type: Other federally established organizations; 
General applicability of requirements: No; 
Number of identified entities: 50; 
Entities directly receiving appropriated funds: 17; 
Percent of average annual appropriated funds to identified entities: 
0.1% 

Entity type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities; 
General applicability of requirements: No; 
Number of identified entities: 1; 
Entities directly receiving appropriated funds: 0; 
Percent of average annual appropriated funds to identified entities: 0. 

Entity type: GSEs[A]; 
General applicability of requirements: No; 
Number of identified entities: 3; 
Entities directly receiving appropriated funds: 0; 
Percent of average annual appropriated funds to identified entities: 0. 

Entity type: FFRDCs; 
General applicability of requirements: No; 
Number of identified entities: 39; 
Entities directly receiving appropriated funds: 0; 
Percent of average annual appropriated funds to identified entities: 0. 

Entity type: Total; 
Number of identified entities: 219; 
Entities directly receiving appropriated funds: 129; 
Percent of average annual appropriated funds to identified entities: 
100.0%. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[A] As of June 2009, two GSEs are in federal conservatorship and have 
received commitments of federal support through funds appropriated to 
the Department of the Treasury and from the Federal Reserve System. 

[End of table] 

Executive departments and other executive branch entities are subject 
to almost all of the 12 key requirements and received, on average, more 
than 98 percent of the appropriated funds reviewed. In contrast, 
nonappropriated fund instrumentalities, government-sponsored 
enterprises, and federally funded research and development centers are 
not subject to the requirements but did not directly receive 
appropriated funds. However, these entities may have received funds 
from other federal sources via contracts, grants, or other 
arrangements. 

In establishing entities and specifying their governance, 
accountability, and transparency requirements, Congress has weighed a 
variety of considerations such as accountability, economy, efficiency, 
effectiveness, and entity missions. Entities not subject to the 
specific requirements GAO reviewed may have adopted or be subject to 
other comparable requirements. 

View GAO-10-97 or key components. For more information, contact Susan 
Ragland at (202) 512-9095 or raglands@gao.gov; Susan Poling at (202) 
512-2667 or polings@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

The Types and Number of Federally Created Entities Are Varied and 
Large: 

Key Governance, Accountability, and Transparency Requirements Are Not 
Universally Applicable to Federally Created Entities: 

Many Federally Created Entities Receive Federally Appropriated Funds: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: List of Federally Created Entities with Budget Data: 

Appendix III: Relevant GAO Reports: 

Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Overview of Entity Types: 

Table 2: Executive Departments: 

Table 3: Other Executive Branch Entities: 

Table 4: Wholly Owned GCCA Corporations: 

Table 5: Mixed-Ownership GCCA Corporations: 

Table 6: Non-GCCA Government Corporations: 

Table 7: Government-Sponsored Enterprises: 

Table 8: Federally Funded Research and Development Centers: 

Table 9: Other Federally Established Organizations: 

Table 10: Specific Governance, Accountability, and Transparency- 
Related Requirements and Statutes: 

Table 11: Applicability of Specific Governance, Accountability, and 
Transparency-Related Requirements to the Different Types of Federally 
Created Entities: 

Table 12: Appropriated Funding to Identified Federally Created Entities 
for Fiscal Years 2005-2008: 

Table 13: List of Federally Created Entities with Identified 
Appropriated Funds for Fiscal Years 2005-2008: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Appropriated Funding Information by Type of Entity for Fiscal 
Years 2005-2008: 

Figure 2: Appropriated Funds for Executive Departments (FYs 2005-2008): 

Figure 3: Appropriated Funds for Other Executive Branch Entities (FYs 
2005-2008): 

Figure 4: Appropriated Funds for Government Corporations (FYs 2005- 
2008): 

Figure 5: Appropriated Funds for Other Federally Established 
Organizations (FYs 2005-2008): 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

October 29, 2009: 

The Honorable Charles Grassley: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Finance: 
United States Senate: 

Dear Senator Grassley: 

Numerous federal statutes establish or authorize the establishment of a 
variety of federally created entities to carry out federal programs and 
further public purposes. While Congress has assigned much of this work 
to executive departments, it also has assigned key roles to other types 
of entities, including private, nonprofit corporations and government- 
sponsored enterprises (GSE). Collectively, these federally created 
entities receive trillions of dollars annually in appropriated funds. 
Over time, Congress has also enacted various broad-based federal reform 
statutes that establish specific requirements for governance, 
accountability, and transparency for many federally created entities. 
Congress enacted these broad-based statutes at different times and for 
different purposes, and their requirements do not universally apply to 
all federally created entities. As a result, you asked us to study 
federally created entities to: 

1. identify and categorize federally created entities into related 
types of entities; 

2. determine the extent to which the various entity types are generally 
subject to key broad-based statutory governance, accountability, and 
transparency requirements; and: 

3. determine the amount of appropriated funds Congress has made 
available directly to each of the individual federally created entities 
in recent years (fiscal years 2005 through 2008). 

For purposes of this report, we use the term "federally created entity" 
to mean an organization established under authority of the federal 
government that is charged with or has the authority to manage 
resources and carry out operations or activities that generally 
advance, involve, or support federal purposes.[Footnote 1] While most 
of the organizations were created by federal statute, some were created 
by a person or organization required or authorized under federal 
statute or regulation to create them.[Footnote 2] We included only 
organizations that have a discrete identity that is separate and 
distinct from any other organization (e.g., not components of executive 
departments, such as the Department of the Treasury's Internal Revenue 
Service). As explained in our detailed scope of work in appendix I, we 
excluded legislative and judicial branch organizations; advisory 
organizations; organizations created under treaties or regional 
compacts; geographic federal political jurisdictions, such as U.S. 
territories and the District of Columbia; organizations established to 
carry out authorized covert intelligence or law enforcement activities; 
organizations created by certain federally created entities; and 
organizations that received a federal charter after their creation. 

To identify and categorize federally created entities, we reviewed the 
United States Government Manual, applicable statutes and regulations, 
the Budget of the United States Government and related budget data 
maintained by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for fiscal 
years 2005 through 2008, lists published by OMB and the Department of 
the Treasury for appropriations accounting and financial reporting 
purposes, and other relevant literature and Web sites. Using this 
approach, we identified 219 federally created entities. However, 
because we did not review all federal laws, articles of incorporation, 
or similar filings related to establishing organizations, we may not 
have identified the entire universe of federally created entities. 
Where possible, we used statutory and regulatory definitions of various 
federally created entities to identify major types of federal entities. 
Then, in order to assign each identified federally created entity to a 
type, we compared the definitions of each type to the organizational 
structure, legal status, and other attributes of each entity. 

To determine the extent to which the various types of federally created 
entities are generally subject to key broad-based statutory governance, 
accountability, and transparency requirements, we reviewed our prior 
reports, Congressional Research Service reports, and other literature 
to identify broad-based statutory reform initiatives designed to 
strengthen federal governance, accountability, and transparency. We 
reviewed these broad-based statutes to identify specific requirements 
[Footnote 3] we considered key to enhancing governance, accountability, 
and transparency and determined the extent to which these requirements 
are generally applicable to the various types of federally created 
entities we identified through reviews of the statutes and entity 
enabling legislation. Because we focused on these specific 
requirements, we did not review all statutes applicable to each 
federally created entity to determine whether the entity might 
otherwise be subject to comparable requirements and we did not 
determine whether individual federally created entities that are not 
subject to these specific requirements may have voluntarily elected to 
adopt them. 

To determine the amount of appropriated funds Congress made available 
for the direct use of each federally created entity in fiscal years 
(FY) 2005 through 2008, we used OMB's MAX budget database.[Footnote 4] 
MAX is a computer system used to collect and process most of the 
information required for preparing the budget using a series of 
schedules or sets of data. This database includes the annual gross 
budget authority for each federally created entity we identified, which 
we use as the measure of appropriated funds in this report. However, 
because OMB's budget database does not identify gross budget authority 
for individual organizations below $1 million, our report does not 
include such amounts. 

We conducted our work from September 2007 to September 2009 in 
accordance with all sections of GAO's Quality Assurance Framework that 
were relevant to our objectives. The framework requires that we plan 
and perform the engagement to obtain sufficient and appropriate 
evidence to meet our stated objectives and to discuss any limitations 
in our work. We believe that the information and data obtained, and the 
analysis conducted, provide a reasonable basis for any findings in this 
report. 

Background: 

Throughout the history of our nation, Congress has established or 
authorized the establishment of various organizations to exercise the 
federal government's constitutional powers. Executive departments, such 
as the Department of the Treasury, have been established in law since 
the days immediately following ratification of the U.S. Constitution. 
[Footnote 5] Other executive branch entities, similar to executive 
departments, generally are vested with the powers of the U.S. 
government, are headed by officers or employees of the U.S. government, 
and are created by law as part of the U.S. government.[Footnote 6] 
Congress has generally established executive departments and other 
executive branch entities to implement federal policies and programs, 
but over the years Congress has created or authorized the creation of 
increasingly diverse types of entities. Other federally created 
entities include quasi-public and private entities such as government- 
sponsored enterprises, nonappropriated fund instrumentalities, 
federally funded research and development centers, and other federally 
established organizations. Congress has assigned different combinations 
of powers, privileges, and duties to each type of federally created 
entity and to the individual entities that comprise each type. 

The specific nature and composition of the types of federally created 
entities vary to help address a broad range of public policy goals. For 
example, Congress established federal entities, such as the Resolution 
Trust Corporation and the Pennsylvania Avenue Development Corporation, 
for specific purposes and later phased them out after the goals were 
achieved. Congress has also created new entities through 
reorganizations, such as when it formed the Department of Homeland 
Security by placing several existing agencies, including the Federal 
Emergency Management Agency and the U.S. Coast Guard, under a new 
executive department.[Footnote 7] 

Federally created entities exhibit a wide variety and combination of 
statutory powers, duties, forms, and other attributes. The federal 
courts have on multiple occasions addressed various issues related to 
the nature and status of some of the federally created entities. These 
issues have included whether different types of federally created 
entities: 

* represent a constitutionally permissible type through which sovereign 
powers may be exercised;[Footnote 8] 

* represent a type of entity subject to any constitutional 
limitation,[Footnote 9] condition,[Footnote 10] or privilege[Footnote 
11] applicable to the federal government (e.g., an entity entitled to 
the benefit of federal sovereign immunity from lawsuits); or: 

* fall under a statutory term that describes which entities are subject 
to a given statute (e.g., an "agency" subject to the Freedom of 
Information Act).[Footnote 12] 

Accordingly, federally created entities may be categorized by applying 
any number of terms used by Congress in different statutes or the 
constitutional and legal principles articulated by the federal courts 
in cases that addressed the different types of issues just mentioned. 

As described in appendix I, for purposes of categorizing federally 
created entities for this report, we relied on statutes and regulations 
with as broad applicability as we could identify that list certain 
types of federally created entities within their meaning (e.g., 
executive departments listed in 5 U.S.C. § 101). Otherwise, we used 
nonlegal labels for entity types that generally reflect the 
constitutional and legal principles set out by the federal courts. Our 
report covers only those entities that existed as of the date we 
completed our review. Through September 2009, we identified 219 
federally created entities. 

In the public sector, the concepts of governance, accountability, and 
transparency are critical for the effective and credible functioning of 
a healthy democracy and in fulfilling the government's responsibilities 
to the public. These concepts, while different, are closely associated 
and frequently used together. To help differentiate them for purposes 
of our review, we considered public sector: 

* governance to be the process of providing leadership and direction to 
entities to help them carry out their organizational mission and 
operating objectives; 

* accountability to be the processes, mechanisms, and other various 
means by which entity management carries out its programs and 
operations and demonstrates its stewardship over and responsibility for 
resources and performance; and: 

* transparency to be the means by which information needed to 
understand, monitor, and oversee entity operations, activities, and 
performance is made available and accessible to management, those 
charged with oversight, and the public. 

While having different meanings, these concepts are interdependent and 
mutually supportive in that effective governance strengthens and 
enhances accountability and transparency, and transparency serves to 
highlight entitywide accountability and supports effective governance 
and oversight. Effective governance, accountability, and transparency 
are key to successfully implementing public sector policies and 
programs and supporting public entities' objectives in such areas as: 
establishing and maintaining effective programs and operations; 
complying with laws and regulations; acting responsibly and 
demonstrating performance in achieving goals; and fostering openness in 
working with Congress and the public. In establishing federally created 
entities and specifying their governance, accountability, and 
transparency requirements, Congress has weighed a variety of economic, 
political, and policy considerations related to the need for, among 
other things, political independence and accountability, economy, 
efficiency, effectiveness, and specific entity missions.[Footnote 13] 

From fiscal years 2005 through 2008, the U.S. government provided 
funding to more than half of federally created entities through annual 
or permanent appropriations and other forms of budget authority. Budget 
authority represents the authority to enter into financial obligations 
that will result in immediate or future outlays involving federal 
government funds, and an appropriation is the authority to incur 
obligations and to make payments from the U.S. Treasury for specified 
purposes.[Footnote 14] The U.S. Constitution provides: "No money shall 
be drawn from the Treasury, but in consequence of appropriations made 
by law."[Footnote 15] Budget authority also includes the authority to 
borrow and spend funds (borrowing authority), enter into contracts in 
advance of an appropriation (contract authority), and obligate and 
expend the proceeds of offsetting receipts and collections (offsetting 
collections). The budgetary accounts in OMB's MAX budget database track 
gross budget authority provided to individual federally created 
entities. For purposes of this report, we characterize this gross 
budget authority as appropriated funds. OMB's MAX budget database does 
not identify other sources of funding that federally created entities 
may receive, including revenues from many business operations that are 
deposited in accounts outside of the U.S. Treasury and federal funding 
from other federally created entities under contracts, grants, or 
similar arrangements. 

The Types and Number of Federally Created Entities Are Varied and 
Large: 

The 219 federally created entities we identified vary in their 
organizational structure, legal status, and purpose, reflecting the 
broad range of missions and responsibilities they carry out. We grouped 
these entities into the following seven different types:[Footnote 16] 

* executive departments, 

* other executive branch entities, 

* government corporations, 

* nonappropriated fund instrumentalities, 

* government-sponsored enterprises, 

* federally funded research and development centers, and: 

* other federally established organizations. 

Table 1 provides an overview of key attributes related to ownership and 
control and to the missions and operations generally applicable to the 
seven different types of federally created entities. The federal 
government's ownership of federally created entities ranges from 
complete for executive departments to none for other federally 
established organizations. Further, the amount of control the federal 
government exercises over federally created entities ranges from 
complete control of executive departments through extensive 
administrative requirements and the leadership of officers appointed by 
the President with the U.S. Senate's advice and consent to shared 
control with the private sector through the terms of federal charters 
of nonprofit corporations and the appointment of their leadership. 

Table 1: Overview of Entity Types: 

Entity types (and number within each): Executive departments (15); 
Key attributes: Ownership and control: U.S. government; 
Key attributes: Mission and operations: Broad areas of responsibility, 
often carried out by multiple component organizations; 
List of entities: See table 2. 

Entity types (and number within each): Other executive branch entities 
(88); 
Key attributes: Ownership and control: U.S. government; 
Key attributes: Mission and operations: Generally involve a specific 
program or regulatory area; 
List of entities: See table 3. 

Entity types (and number within each): Government corporations (23); 
Wholly owned and Non-GCCA (18); 
Key attributes: Ownership and control: U.S. government; 
Key attributes: Mission and operations: Generally provide specified 
goods or services via business-type operations; 
List of entities: See tables 4 and 6. 

Entity types (and number within each): Mixed-ownership (5); 
Key attributes: Ownership and control: Mixed ownership and shared 
control--Private and U.S. government; 
Key attributes: Mission and operations: Generally provide specialized 
financial services via business-type operations; 
List of entities: See table 5. 

Entity types (and number within each): Nonappropriated fund 
instrumentalities (1) (actual number unknown); 
Key attributes: Ownership and control: U.S. government; 
Key attributes: Mission and operations: Generally provide specific 
services to U.S. government personnel and their dependents via business-
type operations; 
List of entities: No listing. 

Entity types (and number within each): Government-sponsored enterprises 
(3); 
Key attributes: Ownership and control: Privately owned and shared 
control--Private and U.S. Government; 
Key attributes: Mission and operations: Provide primary credit markets 
with funding via securities-related activities run by private for-
profit companies; 
List of entities: See table 7. 

Entity types (and number within each): Federally funded research and 
development centers (FFRDCs) (39); 
Key attributes: Privately owned and administered, but managing 
executive agency exercises considerable control; 
Key attributes: Mission and operations: Long-term research and 
development activities run by private companies or educational 
institutions under contract with managing executive agency; 
List of entities: See table 8. 

Entity types (and number within each): Other federally established 
organizations (50); 
Key attributes: Ownership and control: Privately owned and shared 
control--private and U.S. government; 
Key attributes: Mission and operations: Generally provide specific 
services to targeted groups via educational, charitable, or business-
type operations; 
List of entities: See table 9. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[End of table] 

Executive Departments: 

The current 15 executive departments[Footnote 17] (see listing in table 
2) are headed by 14 secretaries and the Attorney General of the United 
States (Department of Justice) who are appointed by the President with 
the U.S. Senate's advice and consent. The departments, which are wholly 
controlled by the federal government, generally have broad areas of 
responsibility and house multiple component organizations to carry out 
specific programs and functions. Congress establishes departments by 
statute and, by tradition, the department heads (along with certain 
other officials granted Cabinet-level status) comprise the President's 
Cabinet.[Footnote 18] As such, the department heads are considered by 
many to be the most directly politically accountable to the President. 
Also, the department heads, by statute, are included in the line of 
succession for the presidency.[Footnote 19] Over the years, 
departments' names have changed through statutory enactment. For 
example, a 1789 statute renamed the Department of Foreign Affairs as 
the Department of State, and a 1979 statute split the Department of 
Health, Education, and Welfare into two separate departments (the 
Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of 
Education).[Footnote 20] Many agencies are housed in executive 
departments. For example, the Department of the Treasury houses the 
Bureau of Engraving and Printing and the Internal Revenue Service, 
among others. 

Table 2: Executive Departments: 

1. Department of Agriculture: 
2. Department of Commerce; 
3. Department of Defense; 
4. Department of Education; 
5. Department of Energy; 
6. Department of Health and Human Services: 
7. Department of Homeland Security; 
8. Department of Housing and Urban Development; 
9. Department of the Interior; 
10. Department of Justice; 
11. Department of Labor: 
12. Department of State; 
13. Department of Transportation; 
14. Department of the Treasury; 
15. Department of Veterans Affairs. 

Source: 5 U.S.C. § 101 and GAO analysis, as of September 2009. 

[End of table] 

Other Executive Branch Entities: 

Entities that we refer to as other executive branch entities are those 
organizations that we place in the executive branch of the U.S. 
government under general constitutional and legal principles that are 
wholly controlled by the federal government and are not executive 
departments or government corporations (as we define those terms in 
this report), or sub-units of a larger executive branch entity. These 
entities are often identified in statute as, among others, agencies, 
establishments, commissions, administrations, services, boards, or 
foundations. 

The heads of these entities may be a single person or a multimember 
body, many of which Congress intended to be relatively free of 
political influence and some of which have unique characteristics. For 
example, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System comprises 
seven members appointed by the President with the advice and consent of 
the U.S. Senate and heads the central bank of the United States, which 
Congress designed to be independent of executive control in setting 
monetary policy and overseeing the financial system. In contrast to 
this political independence, the Executive Office of the President is 
an executive branch entity that operates under the direct control of 
the President. The Executive Office of the President was created 
administratively by the President to assist in carrying out the 
President's constitutional and legal duties.[Footnote 21] The Executive 
Office contains many component entities, some of which were created by 
statute to establish policy for the executive branch, and others that 
were created administratively to provide personal advice, counsel, and 
assistance to the President. 

We identified 88 other executive branch entities as shown in table 3. 
[Footnote 22] These other executive branch entities vary widely in 
their missions, size, funding, and organizational structure. In 
general, they serve a narrower purpose relative to the executive 
departments, such as regulating an industry or implementing a specific 
program. For example, the Social Security Administration's duties 
include administering Social Security, a social insurance program 
providing retirement, survivors, and disability benefits. It is a large 
organization which, for fiscal year 2008, was authorized staffing of 
more than 60,000 personnel. In contrast, the Vietnam Educational 
Foundation was established to create an international fellowship 
program to help Vietnamese undertake advanced studies to build 
excellence in science, mathematics, and technology, and by so doing, 
improve the bilateral relationship between the United States and 
Vietnam. The foundation has four federal and eight contract employees. 

Table 3: Other Executive Branch Entities: 

Advisory Council on Historic Preservation; 
American Battle Monuments Commission; 
Appalachian Regional Commission;
Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board; 
Armed Forces Retirement Home; 
Barry Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education Foundation; 
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; 
Broadcasting Board of Governors; 
Central Intelligence Agency; 
Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board;
Christopher Columbus Fellowship Foundation; 
Commission for the Preservation of America's Heritage Abroad;
Commission of Fine Arts; 
Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, a.k.a; The Helsinki 
Commission; 
Committee for Purchase From People Who Are Blind or Severely Disabled; 
Commodity Futures Trading Commission; 
Consumer Product Safety Commission; 
Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency for the District of 
Columbia; 
Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board; 
Delta Regional Authority; 
Denali Commission; 
District of Columbia Public Defender Service; 
Election Assistance Commission; 
Environmental Protection Agency; 
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; 
Executive Office of the President; 
Farm Credit Administration; 
Federal Communications Commission; 
Federal Election Commission; 
Federal Housing Finance Agency; 
Federal Labor Relations Authority; 
Federal Maritime Commission; 
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service; 
Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission; 
Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board; 
Federal Trade Commission; 
General Services Administration; 
Harry S; Truman Scholarship Foundation; 
James Madison Memorial Fellowship Foundation; 
Japan-United States Friendship Commission; 
Marine Mammal Commission; 
Merit Systems Protection Board; 
Morris K; Udall Scholarship and Excellence in National Environmental 
Policy Foundation; 
National Aeronautics and Space Administration; 
National Archives and Records Administration; 
National Capital Planning Commission; 
National Council on Disability; 
National Credit Union Administration; 
National Foundation on the Arts and the Humanities; 
National Labor Relations Board; 
National Mediation Board; 
National Science Foundation; 
National Transportation Safety Board; 
Northern Border Regional Commission; 
Northern Great Plains Regional Authority; 
Nuclear Regulatory Commission; 
Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board; 
Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission; 
Office of Government Ethics; 
Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation; 
Office of Personnel Management; 
Office of Special Counsel; 
Office of the Director of National Intelligence; 
Office of the Federal Coordinator for Alaska Natural Gas Transportation 
Projects; 
Peace Corps; 
Postal Regulatory Commission; 
Privacy and Civil Liberty Oversight Board; 
Railroad Retirement Board; 
Securities and Exchange Commission; 
Selective Service System; 
Small Business Administration; 
Social Security Administration; 
Southeast Crescent Regional Commission; 
Southwest Border Regional Commission; 
U.S. Agency for International Development; 
U.S. Arctic Research Commission; 
United States Commission on Civil Rights; 
United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces; 
United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims; 
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; 
United States Interagency Council on Homelessness; 
United States International Trade Commission; 
United States Postal Service; 
United States Tax Court; 
United States Trade and Development Agency; 
Utah Reclamation Mitigation and Conservation Commission; 
Vietnam Education Foundation; 
White House Commission on the National Moment of Remembrance; 

Source: GAO analysis, as of September 2009. 

[End of table] 

Government Corporations: 

A government corporation is an entity established by the U.S. 
government in a corporate form by a federal charter for a public 
purpose. We identified 23 government corporations, each owned in whole 
or in part by the U.S. government.[Footnote 23] All entities listed in 
chapter 91 of Title 31 of the U.S. Code, commonly referred to as the 
Government Corporation Control Act (GCCA), are defined as government 
corporations, including 14 wholly owned government corporations and 5 
mixed-ownership government corporations, as shown in tables 4 and 5, 
respectively.[Footnote 24] In addition to corporations listed in GCCA, 
we have identified 4 other federally created entities that are subject 
to the GCCA provisions applicable to wholly owned government 
corporations;[Footnote 25] therefore, we categorized these four as "non-
GCCA" government corporations, which are shown in table 6. 

In contrast to executive departments and other executive branch 
entities, a corporate form of organization as described by President 
Harris S. Truman, is generally appropriate[Footnote 26] for 
administering governmental programs that: 

* are predominantly of a business nature, 

* produce revenue and are potentially self-sustaining, 

* involve a large number of business-type transactions with the public, 
and: 

* require greater flexibility than the appropriations process 
ordinarily permits. 

While public administration experts have since referred to these 
general characteristics,[Footnote 27] Congress is not bound by them. 
For example, Congress established the Millennium Challenge Corporation 
in 2004 to provide U.S. assistance through annual appropriations for 
global development in a manner consistent with economic growth, poverty 
reduction, and good governance.[Footnote 28] Government corporations 
are generally not as dependent upon annual appropriations as executive 
departments and other executive branch entities to fund operations, and 
in recognition of their corporate structure, Congress gives them much 
greater operational flexibility. Government corporations also differ 
from private nonprofit corporations in that the U.S. government owns 
all (wholly owned and non-GCCA) or some of the (mixed-ownership) 
government corporations; government corporations' federal chartering 
statutes control operations of the corporation rather than a general 
state incorporation statute for private nonprofit corporations; the 
boards of directors of government corporations are appointed by the 
President, another executive branch officer, or the member institutions 
rather than appointment by management or shareholders; and, when 
compared to private nonprofit corporations, the U.S. government has a 
more significant oversight role over government corporations under GCCA 
and other statutes and through implementing regulations and guidance. 

Table 4: Wholly Owned GCCA Corporations: 

1. Commodity Credit Corporation; 
2. Community Development Financial Institutions Fund; 
3. Corporation for National and Community Service; 
4. Export-Import Bank of the United States; 
5. Federal Crop Insurance Corporation; 
6. Federal Prison Industries, Incorporated; 
7. Government National Mortgage Association; 
8. International Clean Energy Foundation;
9. Millennium Challenge Corporation; 
10. Overseas Private Investment Corporation; 
11. Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation;
12. Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation;
13. Federal Housing Administration Fund[A];
14. Tennessee Valley Authority. 

Source: 31 U.S.C. § 9101 and note and GAO analysis, as of September 
2009. 

[A] This is a wholly owned government corporation headed by the Federal 
Housing Administrator who also serves as Assistant Secretary for 
Housing in the Department of Housing and Urban Development. 

[End of table] 

Table 5: Mixed-Ownership GCCA Corporations: 

1. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation: 
2. Federal Home Loan Banks (12)[A]; 
3. Financing Corporation; 
4. National Credit Union Administration Central Liquidity Facility: 
5. Resolution Funding Corporation. 

Source: 31 U.S.C. § 9101 and note and GAO analysis, as of September 
2009. 

[A] There are 12 federal Home Loan Banks in the Federal Home Loan Bank 
system. 

[End of table] 

Table 6: Non-GCCA Government Corporations: 

1. African Development Foundation; 
2. Inter-American Foundation;
3. Presidio Trust;
4. Valles Caldera Trust; 

Source: GAO analysis, as of September 2009. 

Note: The Federal Financing Bank was established by statute as a 
corporation, Pub. L. No. 93-224, but because it operates under the 
direction and control of the Secretary of the Treasury, we considered 
it to be part of the Department of the Treasury for purposes of this 
report. 

[End of table] 

Nonappropriated Fund Instrumentalities: 

There exist a large but unknown number of nonappropriated fund 
instrumentalities of the U.S. government (NAFIs). In general, NAFIs are 
entities that can be established under authority or sanction of an 
existing federally created entity (generally including executive 
departments and other executive branch entities). For example, the 
Department of Defense operates military post exchanges to benefit 
military personnel and their dependents by selling commercial goods and 
services to them.[Footnote 29] The actual number of NAFIs is not known 
because federally created entities generally are not required to report 
publicly on their NAFIs, there is no official or commonly understood 
definition of a NAFI, and no source exists to identify each NAFI that 
may exist.[Footnote 30] For purposes of this report, we recognize NAFIs 
as a single entity. While they may be established with or without an 
initial advance of federal funds, NAFIs are operated without receiving 
direct appropriations and are generally financed by the proceeds from 
their organization's operations. NAFIs are often established to further 
performance of governmental functions (e.g., operate an activity for 
the benefit of U.S. government personnel or their dependents, such as 
military morale, welfare, and recreation NAFIs that operate gyms, 
lodging facilities, and other services for military personnel and their 
dependents). Other examples of NAFIs include the Graduate School, U.S. 
Department of Agriculture; Marine Corps Exchanges; Navy Resale and 
Services Support Office; and the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy Ships 
Service Store. Generally, while funded primarily with self-generated 
operational revenues, the assets of NAFIs are considered to be U.S. 
government property for most purposes. Also, NAFIs are under the 
complete control of the federally created entity that established them, 
and usually are operated by U.S. government personnel. 

Government-Sponsored Enterprises: 

We identified three government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs), which are 
federally chartered but established to be privately owned and operated 
financial institutions that are authorized to make loans or loan 
guarantees for limited purposes. Congress created these quasi-public 
entities for specific public policy purposes, such as facilitating the 
flow of investment funds to specific economic sectors by acting as 
financial intermediaries with access to national capital 
markets.[Footnote 31] Generally, GSEs provide capital market liquidity 
through intermediaries rather than lending money directly to members of 
the public. To perform this role, they do such things as issue capital 
stock and short-and long-term debt instruments, guarantee mortgage- 
backed securities, purchase loans and hold them in their own 
portfolios, fund designated activities, and collect fees for guarantees 
and other services. GSEs generally have a nationwide scope, and they 
benefit from the market perception of an implied federal guarantee. 
Further, they are regulated by specialized federally created entities 
(the Federal Housing Finance Agency and the Farm Credit 
Administration), in addition to other federally created entities that 
regulate corporations generally and state regulatory agencies. 

While there is no broad-based statutory definition of GSEs, the 
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, as amended,[Footnote 32] provides a 
definition for purposes of the federal budget that is commonly used. 
Applying this definition, OMB has identified five GSEs, including the 
three that we identified.[Footnote 33] We excluded two GSEs from our 
list, the Farm Credit System and the Federal Home Loan Bank System, 
because they are not distinct separate organizations and they are 
composed of multiple component federally created entities, each of 
which is listed in our report under other types. 

Table 7: Government-Sponsored Enterprises: 

1. Fannie Mae (formerly known as the Federal National Mortgage 
Association); 
2. Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac);
3. Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation (Farmer Mac). 

Source: GAO analysis, as of September 2009. 

[End of table] 

While GSEs were chartered as privately owned and the federal government 
explicitly does not guarantee their debt obligations, investors and 
other interested parties have widely assumed that if GSEs faced a 
financial emergency they would receive some form of federal support. In 
September 2008, federal support was, in fact, provided to Fannie Mae 
and Freddie Mac. Out of concern that their deteriorating financial 
condition would threaten the stability of financial markets, the 
Federal Housing Finance Agency, an executive branch entity, placed 
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into conservatorship, and the Department of 
the Treasury, an executive department, agreed to use its appropriated 
funds to provide financial support by committing to purchase preferred 
stock in each GSE to maintain their positive net worth.[Footnote 34] As 
of June 2009, Treasury has committed to purchase up to $200 billion in 
preferred stock in each GSE and has provided $85 billion under those 
commitments. In addition, the Department of the Treasury and the Board 
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System have also agreed to purchase 
the various GSE-related debts and securities to support housing 
finance, housing markets, and, more generally, the financial markets. 
[Footnote 35] 

Federally Funded Research and Development Centers: 

A federally funded research and development center (FFRDC) is one of 39 
[Footnote 36] private entities that executive departments and other 
executive branch entities (managing executive agencies) have 
established to meet long-term federal research needs.[Footnote 37] In 
an FFRDC, such as the Los Alamos National Laboratory, federal 
contractors perform specific duties as provided for in their contracts, 
and have closer than usual relationships with their managing executive 
agencies. The Department of Defense and the Department of Energy serve 
as managing executive agencies for most FFRDCs (10 and 16, 
respectively). While FFRDCs generally are operated by their private 
entity administrators under pertinent state laws, the federal 
government contracts and related federal acquisition regulations 
applicable to FFRDCs provide for higher levels of oversight and control 
than otherwise would be the case for federal government contractors. 
The National Science Foundation maintains the Web site of the official 
list of FFRDCs,[Footnote 38] which are enumerated in table 8 along with 
their managing executive agencies and private entity administrators. 

Table 8: Federally Funded Research and Development Centers: 

Federally funded research and development center: C3I Federally Funded 
Research & Development Center; 
Managing executive agency: Defense, Office of the Secretary of Defense; 
Private entity administrator: MITRE Corp. 

Federally funded research and development center: Institute for Defense 
Analyses Studies Federally Funded Research and Development Center; 
Managing executive agency: Defense, Office of the Secretary of Defense; 
Private entity administrator: Institute for Defense Analyses. 

Federally funded research and development center: National Defense 
Research Institute; 
Managing executive agency: Defense, Office of the Secretary of Defense; 
Private entity administrator: RAND Corp. 

Federally funded research and development center: Aerospace Federally 
Funded Research and Development Center; 
Managing executive agency: Defense, Air Force; 
Private entity administrator: Aerospace Corp. 

Federally funded research and development center: Lincoln Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: Defense, Air Force; 
Private entity administrator: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 

Federally funded research and development center: Project Air Force; 
Managing executive agency: Defense, Air Force; 
Private entity administrator: RAND Corp. 

Federally funded research and development center: Arroyo Center; 
Managing executive agency: Defense, Army; 
Private entity administrator: RAND Corp. 

Federally funded research and development center: Software Engineering 
Institute; 
Managing executive agency: Defense, Army; 
Private entity administrator: Carnegie Mellon University. 

Federally funded research and development center: Center for Naval 
Analyses; 
Managing executive agency: Defense, Navy; 
Private entity administrator: CNA Corp. 

Federally funded research and development center: Institute for Defense 
Analyses Communications and Computing Federally Funded Research and 
Development Center; 
Managing executive agency: Defense, NSA; 
Private entity administrator: Institute for Defense Analyses. 

Federally funded research and development center: Ames Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: Iowa State University of Science and 
Technology. 

Federally funded research and development center: Argonne National 
Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: University of Chicago. 

Federally funded research and development center: Brookhaven National 
Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: Brookhaven Science Associates, Inc. 

Federally funded research and development center: Ernest Orlando 
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: University of California. 

Federally funded research and development center: Fermi National 
Accelerator Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: Universities Research Association, Inc. 

Federally funded research and development center: Idaho National 
Engineering and Environmental Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: Bechtel BWXT Idaho, LLC. 

Federally funded research and development center: Lawrence Livermore 
National Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: University of California. 

Federally funded research and development center: Los Alamos National 
Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: University of California. 

Federally funded research and development center: National Renewable 
Energy Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: Midwest Research Institute; Battelle 
Memorial Institute; Bechtel National, Inc. 

Federally funded research and development center: Oak Ridge National 
Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: UT-Battelle, LLC. 

Federally funded research and development center: Pacific Northwest 
National Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: Battelle Memorial Institute. 

Federally funded research and development center: Princeton Plasma 
Physics Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: Princeton University. 

Federally funded research and development center: Sandia National 
Laboratories; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: Sandia Corp., a subsidiary of Lockheed 
Martin, Corp. 

Federally funded research and development center: Savannah River 
Technology Center; 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: Westinghouse Savannah River Co. 

Federally funded research and development center: Stanford Linear 
Accelerator Center (SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory); 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: Stanford University. 

Federally funded research and development center: Thomas Jefferson 
National Accelerator Facility (Southeastern Universities Research 
Association, Inc.); 
Managing executive agency: Energy; 
Private entity administrator: Southeastern Universities Research 
Association, Inc. 

Federally funded research and development center: National Cancer 
Institute at Frederick; 
Managing executive agency: Health and Human Services, NIH; 
Private entity administrator: Science Applications International Corp.; 
Charles River Laboratories, Inc.; Data Management Services, Inc.; 
Wilson Information Services, Inc. 

Federally funded research and development center: Homeland Security 
Studies and Analysis Institute; 
Managing executive agency: Homeland Security; 
Private entity administrator: Analytic Services, Inc. 

Federally funded research and development center: Homeland Security 
Systems Engineering and Development Institute; 
Managing executive agency: Homeland Security; 
Private entity administrator: MITRE Corp. 

Federally funded research and development center: National Biodefense 
Analysis and Countermeasures Center; 
Managing executive agency: Homeland Security; 
Private entity administrator: Battelle National Biodefense Institute. 

Federally funded research and development center: Jet Propulsion 
Laboratory; 
Managing executive agency: National Aeronautics and Space 
Administration; 
Private entity administrator: California Institute of Technology. 

Federally funded research and development center: National Astronomy 
and Ionosphere Center; 
Managing executive agency: National Science Foundation; 
Private entity administrator: Cornell University. 

Federally funded research and development center: National Center for 
Atmospheric Research; 
Managing executive agency: National Science Foundation; 
Private entity administrator: University Corporation for Atmospheric 
Research. 

Federally funded research and development center: National Optical 
Astronomy Observatories; 
Managing executive agency: National Science Foundation; 
Private entity administrator: Association of Universities for Research 
in Astronomy, Inc. 

Federally funded research and development center: National Radio 
Astronomy Observatory; 
Managing executive agency: National Science Foundation; 
Private entity administrator: Associated Universities, Inc. 

Federally funded research and development center: Science and 
Technology Policy Institute; 
Managing executive agency: National Science Foundation; 
Private entity administrator: Institute for Defense Analyses. 

Federally funded research and development center: Center for Nuclear 
Waste Regulatory Analyses; 
Managing executive agency: Nuclear Regulatory Commission; 
Private entity administrator: Southwest Research Institute. 

Federally funded research and development center: Center for Advanced 
Aviation System Development; 
Managing executive agency: Transportation, FAA; 
Private entity administrator: MITRE Corp. 

Federally funded research and development center: Internal Revenue 
Service (IRS) Federally Funded Research and Development Center; 
Managing executive agency: Treasury, IRS; 
Private entity administrator: Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Federally 
Funded Research and Development Center (MITRE Corp., Center for 
Enterprise Modernization). 

Source: National Science Foundation. 

[End of table] 

Other Federally Established Organizations: 

We identified 50 additional federally created entities that did not fit 
under any of the other six federally created entity types discussed in 
this report. They are private, nonprofit corporations, institutes, 
banks, funds, foundations, and other organizations chartered, in their 
original form, by federal statute or created by or at the direction of 
an existing federally created entity that we included in the first six 
types. These federally created entities generally are privately owned 
but are controlled by the federal government to a greater extent than 
other private for-profit or nonprofit organizations through the 
appointment of their leadership or additional regulation. The missions 
of these entities vary substantially, but individually they are 
narrowly defined. For some of these entities, we counted multiple 
entities as an individual entity, such as the Farm Credit Banks, of 
which there are 5. Eight of the 50--including the Help America Vote 
Foundation and the National Academy of Sciences--were established and 
chartered by Congress to serve patriotic, charitable, historical, or 
educational purposes under Title 36 of the U.S. Code.[Footnote 39] 
Congress has also chartered several other private, nonprofit 
corporations--including the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the 
Legal Services Corporation--to carry out federal purposes that do not 
fall under Title 36 of the U.S. Code. In addition, Congress established 
other organizations, including the U.S. State Justice Institute and the 
Telecommunications Development Fund. Finally, we identified several 
other entities that were created by officials of existing federally 
created entities, including the National Exchange Carriers Association 
(by the Federal Communications Commission) and the Veterans Affairs 
Nonprofit Research and Education Corporations (by the Department of 
Veterans Affairs). Among such entities, we identified three venture 
capital funds established by federally created entities as nonprofit 
corporations in conjunction with members of the venture capital 
community for the purpose of fostering technological innovation that 
the federally created entities could later use under contracts or other 
instruments to further their missions. These include: OnPoint 
Technologies, created by the Department of Defense; Red Planet Capital, 
created by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration; and In-Q- 
Tel, created by the Central Intelligence Agency. While we identified a 
total of 50 other federally established organizations, there is no 
single source of information that identifies all such entities. 
Accordingly, we may not have identified all that exist. 

Table 9 lists the other federally established organizations. 

Table 9: Other Federally Established Organizations: 

Agricultural Commodity Organizations (e.g., U.S. Popcorn Board) 
(18)[A]; 
Agricultural Credit Bank; 
Alaska Native Corporations (195)[B]; 
American National Red Cross; 
American Registry of Pathology; 
Amtrak; 
Congressional Award Board; 
Corporation for Public Broadcasting; 
Corporation for the Promotion of Rifle Practice and Firearms Safety; 
Farm Credit Banks (5); 
Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation; 
Federal Farm Banks Funding Corporation; 
Federal Reserve Banks (12); 
Foundation for the National Institutes of Health; 
Gallaudet University; 
Help America Vote Foundation; 
Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine; 
Howard University; 
In-Q-Tel; 
Institute of American Indian and Alaska Native Culture and Arts; 
International Center for Middle Eastern-Western Dialogue; 
Legal Services Corporation; 
Military Relief Associations (e.g., Army Emergency Relief)[C]; 
National Academy of Sciences; 
National Consumer Cooperative Bank (dba NCB); 

National Exchange Carriers Association; 
National Fallen Firefighters Foundation; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: National Fish and Wildlife 
Foundation; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: National Forest Foundation; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: National Foundation for the 
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (a.k.a. CDC Foundation); 
National Exchange Carriers Association: National Fund for Excellence in 
American Indian Education; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: National Fund for Medical 
Education; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: National Park Foundation; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: National Recording Preservation 
Foundation; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: National Technical Institute 
for the Deaf; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: National Veterans Business 
Development Corporation; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: Neighborhood Reinvestment 
Corporation; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: OnPoint Technologies; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: Public Company Accounting 
Oversight Board; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: Reagan-Udall Foundation for the 
Food and Drug Administration; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: Red Planet Capital; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: Securities Investor Protection 
Corporation; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: Smithsonian Institution; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: State Justice Institute; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: Telecommunications Development 
Fund; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: United States Capitol 
Historical Society; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: United States Enrichment 
Corporation; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: United States Institute of 
Peace; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: United States Olympic 
Committee; 
National Exchange Carriers Association: Veterans Affairs Nonprofit 
Research and Education Corporations (86)[D]. 

Source: GAO analysis, as of September 2009. 

[A] According to the Web site of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's 
Agricultural Marketing Service, there are at least 18 research and 
promotion programs with boards or councils established by departmental 
order. See [hyperlink, http://www.ams.usda.gov] (last visited Oct. 23, 
2009). For background on the operation of these programs, see, for 
example, GAO, Agricultural Marketing: Federally Authorized Commodity 
Research and Promotion Programs, GAO/RCED-94-63 (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 
29, 1993). 

[B] The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, codified, as amended, in 
part at 43 U.S.C. §§ 1606 and 1607, required the incorporation of: 12 
regional Alaska Native Corporations, each representing a region of 
Alaska; a 13th regional corporation for Alaska Natives living outside 
Alaska; and, within each region, village corporations for the Native 
Village's residents. In April 2006, we reported that there were also 
182 village, urban, and group corporations located within the 12 
regions. GAO, Contract Management: Increased Use of Alaska Native 
Corporations' Special 8(a) Provisions Calls for Tailored Oversight, GAO-
06-399, at 9 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 27, 2006). 

[C] There are several military relief associations and affiliated 
military personnel support organizations. See [hyperlink, 
http://www.aerhq.org/links.asp] (last visited Oct. 23, 2009). However, 
because the articles of incorporation for each of these are not 
publicly available, we can conclude only that Army Emergency Relief was 
created directly by the U.S. Army. 

[D] According to the online membership directory of the National 
Association of Veterans' Research and Education Foundations, it has 86 
member corporations. See [hyperlink, 
http://www.navref.org/about/default.htm] (last visited Oct. 23, 2009). 
There may be corporations that are not members of this organization. 

[End of table] 

Key Governance, Accountability, and Transparency Requirements Are Not 
Universally Applicable to Federally Created Entities: 

Congress has enacted a number of major statutes containing various 
requirements to enhance governance, accountability, and transparency in 
the federal government. As shown in table 10, we identified 12 specific 
requirements associated with key management reform statutes.[Footnote 
40] These 12 key requirements are aimed at enhancing federal 
governance, accountability, and transparency through the goals of 
improving the ability of entities to establish and maintain effective 
programs and operations; comply with laws and regulations; demonstrate 
responsibility and accountability for resources and performance; and 
provide management, Congress, and the public with useful information. 
In addition, these 12 requirements are similar to requirements or 
accepted practices designed to enhance governance, accountability, and 
transparency at publicly traded private corporations, nonprofit 
corporations, and state or local government organizations. 

The 12 specific requirements are not universally applicable to all 
federally created entities. This is because, in part, Congress 
determined the entities that would be subject to the particular 
statutes and their related requirements by considering various 
attributes and objectives. In doing so, Congress considered the various 
types of federally created entities as well as their key distinguishing 
characteristics, including ownership, control, mission, political 
independence and accountability, and operations. While we focused on 
the 12 specific statutory requirements, it is important to recognize 
that other statutes may have imposed other requirements on certain 
federally created entities designed to strengthen governance, 
accountability, and transparency on federally created entities. 

Table 10: Specific Governance, Accountability, and Transparency- 
Related Requirements and Statutes: 

Key requirements: Budget Preparation, Review, and Approval--
Preparation, review, and, where applicable, approval of entity budgets 
by President and Congress; 
Related statutes, as amended: Budget and Accounting Act of 1921; 
Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974; Government 
Corporation Control Act. 

Key requirements: Strategic and Performance Planning--Develop 
entitywide strategic and performance plans, and report on progress in 
achieving strategic goals and performance objectives; 
Related statutes, as amended: Government Performance and Results Act of 
1993. 

Key requirements: Internal Audit--The establishment of independent and 
objective functions to conduct and oversee audits and investigations; 
promote economy, efficiency, and effectiveness; detect and prevent 
fraud and abuse; and inform entity heads and Congress about problems 
and deficiencies; 
Related statutes, as amended: Inspector General Act of 1978. 

Key requirements: Budget Execution and Funds Control--Funds are only to 
be used for the purposes for which they were appropriated; officers and 
employees may not obligate or expend amounts in excess of or in advance 
of appropriations or in excess of formal subdivisions of 
appropriations; 
Related statutes, as amended: Purpose Statute; Antideficiency Act. 

Key requirements: Control of Improper Payments--Entities must measure 
and disclose estimates of improper payments and related actions to 
minimize their occurrence; 
Related statutes, as amended: Improper Payments Information Act of 
2002. 

Key requirements: Internal Control and Accounting Systems--Entities 
must establish entitywide internal control systems in accordance with 
established standards and annually assess and report externally on 
whether internal control systems comply with applicable standards. In 
addition, entities must annually assess and externally report on 
whether accounting systems comply with applicable principles, 
standards, and related requirements; 
Related statutes, as amended: Federal Managers' Financial Integrity Act 
of 1982; Government Corporation Control Act. 

Key requirements: Preparing and Reporting of Audited Financial 
Statements--Entities must prepare, independently audit, and externally 
report entitywide financial statements in accordance with applicable 
accounting principles and auditing standards; 
Related statutes, as amended: Government Corporation Control Act; 
Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990; Government Management Reform Act 
of 1994; Accountability of Tax Dollars Act of 2002. 

Key requirements: Standards of Conduct--Employees are prohibited from 
having conflicts of interest or from certain post-government employment 
activities; and certain senior employees are required to disclose 
publicly their outside income, investment, and activities and accept 
restrictions on post-government employment activities; 
Related statutes, as amended: Ethics in Government Act of 1978; 
Ethics Reform Act of 1989. 

Key requirements: Whistleblower Protection--Establishes rights and 
remedies for employees who incur retaliation for protected disclosures 
of a violation of law, rule, gross waste of funds, abuse of authority, 
or a substantial and specific risk to public health or safety; 
Related statutes, as amended: Whistleblower Protection Act of 1989. 

Key requirements: Access to Public Records--Federal entities must make 
their records available for public inspection, subject to specified 
exceptions; 
Related statutes, as amended: Freedom of Information Act. 

Key requirements: Availability of Federal Contract and Grant 
Information--Data on federal awards (e.g., contracts and grants) must 
be made accessible to the public via a searchable Web site; 
Related statutes, as amended: Federal Funding Accountability and 
Transparency Act of 2006. 

Key requirements: Access to Public Meetings--Policy and decision-making 
meetings of government corporations and other executive branch entities 
headed by multi-person bodies (e.g., boards and commissions) must be 
open to the public, subject to specific exceptions; 
Related statutes, as amended: Government in the Sunshine Act. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[End of table] 

The following paragraphs describe each of the 12 specific requirements 
shown in table 10. 

Budget Preparation, Review, and Approval. Sound governance, 
accountability, and transparency for federally created entities include 
preparation, review, and approval of the entity's plans for obtaining 
and using resources to carry out its mission and related operating 
goals and objectives. The Budget and Accounting Act of 1921, as 
amended;[Footnote 41] the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control 
Act of 1974, as amended;[Footnote 42] and Chapter 91 of Title 31 of the 
U.S. Code (commonly referred to as the Government Corporation Control 
Act (GCCA))[Footnote 43] provide the statutory requirements governing 
the development, review, and approval of the budget of the U.S. 
government and of individual federally created entities. For the 
federally created entities that use appropriated funds, the budget 
review and approval process involves executive branch review and 
congressional action on the entity's request for appropriations. The 
President, through the Office of Management and Budget, plays an 
important role in this process by reviewing and, where applicable, 
approving budget requests from many federally created entities. This 
executive branch review is intended to help ensure that entity budget 
requests are consistent with the administration's policies and 
priorities. Once incorporated into the President's proposed Budget of 
the United States Government, the administration submits the funding 
requests to Congress for its review and preparation of a congressional 
budget resolution that guides Congress in its drafting of annual 
appropriations and other bills that affect revenues and budget 
authority. Congressional review and action on the amounts and planned 
uses of appropriated funds provide additional leadership, direction, 
and oversight. Together the executive and legislative branch review and 
approval of federally created entities' budget requests serve as 
important governance and transparency requirements. The review of 
previous uses of appropriated funds during this process also serves as 
a mechanism to hold entity leadership accountable. 

Strategic and Performance Planning. The establishment and disclosure of 
an entitywide strategic plan and annual performance goals, and annual 
reporting on progress in achieving those goals provide important 
information that enhances governance, accountability, and transparency 
of federally created entities. The Government Performance and Results 
Act of 1993 (GPRA)[Footnote 44] required, among other things, most 
executive departments, government corporations, and "independent 
establishments"[Footnote 45] to develop strategic plans with long-term 
goals and objectives, annual performance goals linked to achieving long-
term goals, and annual reporting on the results achieved.[Footnote 46] 
These GPRA requirements apply to all executive departments and 
government corporations and most of the 88 other executive branch 
entities (e.g., the Central Intelligence Agency is excluded). The 
requirement for strategic and performance plans was a response to 
increased demands for improved federal performance and accountability 
by helping to link the planned use of resources with results achieved 
by measuring progress against the plans and by enhancing the 
information available for use in management, decision making, and 
oversight. The requirements to involve stakeholders, along with annual 
reporting on the results achieved, are also aimed at helping to promote 
transparency in the federal government. 

Internal Audit. An independent and objective internal audit and 
investigative function similar to that required by the Inspector 
General Act of 1978, as amended (IG Act), provides specified federally 
created entities with the authority to conduct and oversee audits and 
investigations; promotes economy, efficiency, and effectiveness; helps 
detect and prevent fraud and abuse; and informs agency heads and 
Congress about problems and deficiencies.[Footnote 47] The oversight 
role of government auditors is important to help ensure that public 
functions are carried out efficiently, economically, effectively, 
ethically, and legally to limit exposure to fraud, waste, 
mismanagement, and abuse. An independent and objective internal audit 
and investigative function can also strengthen entitywide governance, 
accountability, and transparency. 

Budget Execution and Funds Control. Sound governance and accountability 
of federally created entities include efforts to ensure that 
appropriated funds are used in accordance with requirements specified 
by Congress when providing funds. In accordance with the Purpose 
Statute[Footnote 48] and the Antideficiency Act,[Footnote 49] 
applicable federally created entities are responsible for ensuring that 
appropriations are used for the purposes intended by Congress and in 
the amounts and during the time periods provided by law. The Purpose 
Statute requires U.S. government officers and employees to use 
appropriated funds only for the purposes provided in law. The 
Antideficiency Act prohibits U.S. government officers and employees 
from obligating or expending funds in advance or in excess of 
appropriations or in excess of apportionments or other formal 
subdivisions of appropriations. 

Control of Improper Payments. Proper safeguarding and accountability 
for public funds include helping to ensure that payments for goods or 
services are correct. In the public sector, wasteful spending 
associated with improper payments[Footnote 50] results in such outcomes 
as fewer services received or a higher tax burden. As stewards of 
taxpayer dollars, federally created entities are not only accountable 
for federal funds, but are also responsible for determining whether 
there is a problem with their use, and if so, correcting it. In 
response to continuing concerns about improper payments of federal 
funds, Congress enacted the Improper Payments Information Act of 2002 
[Footnote 51] (IPIA) to increase financial accountability and thereby 
reduce wasteful spending. IPIA requires "executive agencies," which 
includes "departments, agencies, and instrumentalities in the executive 
branch," to identify programs and activities susceptible to significant 
improper payments and estimate amounts improperly paid. For programs 
and activities with large amounts of estimated improper payments 
(greater that $10 million annually), IPIA agencies are required to 
report to Congress on actions being taken to reduce them. 

Internal Control and Accounting Systems. Establishing, monitoring, and 
publicly reporting on internal control and accounting systems serve to 
strengthen entity accountability and control and provide important 
information needed to monitor and oversee entities. As a major 
component of managing an organization, internal control comprises the 
plans, methods, and procedures used to meet missions, goals, and 
objectives and to support performance-based management. It also serves 
as a first line of defense in safeguarding assets and preventing and 
detecting errors and fraud. Section 3512(c), (d) of Title 31 of the 
U.S. Code (commonly referred to as the Federal Managers' Financial 
Integrity Act of 1982 (FMFIA)) requires the heads of "executive 
agencies," which include "departments, agencies, and instrumentalities 
in the executive branch" other than government corporations, to 
establish and maintain internal control and accounting systems that 
comply with applicable standards, annually evaluate their internal 
control and accounting systems, and report on whether their internal 
control and accounting systems comply with established standards and 
guidance.[Footnote 52] These requirements also apply to government 
corporations under amendments to GCCA.[Footnote 53] To meet these 
requirements, management is expected to implement appropriate practices 
to establish, monitor, and report on the entity's internal control and 
identify and address significant internal control weaknesses, including 
detailing plans and schedules for correcting them. Executive agency 
heads are also required to report separately on whether their 
accounting systems conform to applicable system-related principles, 
standards, and requirements. Collectively, these internal control and 
accounting systems requirements are aimed at strengthening 
accountability and transparency by generating reliable, useful, timely 
information for entity managers, decision makers, and those charged 
with governance. 

Preparing and Reporting of Audited Financial Statements. To help 
advance the goals of strong financial management and accountability in 
the federal government, Congress has enacted various broad-based 
statutes--specifically GCCA,[Footnote 54] the Chief Financial Officers 
Act of 1990 (CFO Act),[Footnote 55] the Government Management Reform 
Act of 1994 (GMRA),[Footnote 56] and the Accountability of Tax Dollars 
Act of 2002 (ATDA)[Footnote 57]--to require certain federally created 
entities to prepare, independently audit, and publicly report 
entitywide financial statements.[Footnote 58] To meet these 
requirements, affected federally created entities must adopt applicable 
accounting principles, develop a reliable financial reporting process, 
annually prepare and have audited entitywide financial statements, and 
publicly report their audited financial statements, including the 
independent audit report. Important goals and objectives of this 
requirement include strengthening entitywide accountability and 
transparency by providing timely and useful information to support 
management and promoting effective governance and oversight. 

Standards of Conduct. To help prevent and detect employment-related 
conflicts of interest, Congress enacted the Ethics in Government Act of 
1978 and Ethics Reform Act of 1989,[Footnote 59] which together 
established financial disclosure requirements and restrictions on 
outside income and activities and post-government employment activities 
by certain employees and officers of the U.S. government. In response 
to these requirements, affected federally created entities have 
established programs related to employee ethics and standards of 
conduct and procedures and practices related to enforcing ethical 
standards and preparing and reviewing periodic employee disclosures 
related to financial matters, outside income, and other activities. The 
ethics-related programs, procedures, and practices established by 
affected federally created entities are intended to strengthen 
accountability and transparency by fostering ethical standards and 
conduct and reducing potential conflicts of interest. They also support 
related governance and oversight. 

Whistleblower Protection. Helping to identify and address violations of 
statutes or regulations and evidence of gross mismanagement, waste, 
abuse, or danger to public health and safety serves to strengthen 
accountability and transparency related to entities' operations and 
activities. The Whistleblower Protection Act of 1989[Footnote 60] 
protects most employees of executive departments and other executive 
branch entities, and to a limited extent, employees of government 
corporations, from adverse personnel actions taken in retaliation for a 
protected disclosure, by protected employees, of illegal or improper 
government activities. The act protects such employees by imposing an 
affirmative duty on entity heads to prevent such retaliation and 
extending rights and responsibilities to employees who are the subject 
of such retaliation. To meet these requirements, federally created 
entities have had to institute procedures and practices to protect 
employee disclosures. 

Access to Public Records. Openness and public access to information 
about an entity's activities and operations are key to public 
accountability and transparency in providing information needed to 
monitor and oversee an entity's operations and activities. The Freedom 
of Information Act (FOIA)[Footnote 61] requires executive departments, 
government corporations, and other executive branch entities to make, 
upon request, their records available for public inspection and 
copying, unless the information is covered by specific exemptions, such 
as an individual's medical records or proprietary or trade secret 
information. To meet these requirements, affected federally created 
entities must establish processes to determine whether requested 
information should be made available and, if so, procedures to make 
that information available. The requirement to make applicable records 
available to the public provides an important mechanism facilitating 
public inquiry and information gathering about the operations and 
activities of executive branch entities, which strengthens governance, 
accountability, and transparency. 

Availability of Federal Contract and Grant Information. To enhance 
transparency and accountability for the award of federal funds, the 
Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006[Footnote 
62] requires that affected federally created entities make federal 
obligation and expenditure data on the award of federal financial 
assistance and expenditures (federal award) accessible to the public 
via a searchable Web site containing detailed information about the 
federal award, including federal grants, cooperative agreements, loans, 
and contracts (including subcontracts and task orders)--to grantees, 
contractors, states and localities, and any other award recipients. 
Public access to information on those receiving federal awards serves 
to promote transparency and accountability and strengthen public 
awareness of and scrutiny over federal spending. 

Access to Public Meetings. Opening affected entity meetings to the 
public provides transparency and access to information on federal 
decision making. To enhance public access to certain policymaking 
deliberations at selected federally entities, Congress enacted the 
Government in the Sunshine Act.[Footnote 63] The act requires certain 
federally created entities--those headed by multiperson bodies 
appointed by the President and confirmed by the U.S. Senate--to provide 
the public with access to meetings, unless one of the statutory 
exceptions apply, in which policymaking deliberations are made or 
agency business is conducted. A goal of opening such meetings to the 
public has been to promote accountability for and transparency of 
portions of the federal decision-making process. 

General Applicability of Governance, Accountability, and Transparency 
Requirements to Types of Federally Created Entities: 

In establishing the 12 broad-based governance, accountability, and 
transparency requirements and their applicability to the various 
federally created entities, Congress considered differences in types of 
entities, including their ownership, legal status, control, mission, 
and operations. After reviewing the major statutes that established 
each requirement and statutes associated with particular entity types, 
we determined the extent to which entity types were generally subject 
to each requirement. As shown in table 11, which presents the results 
of our analysis, the general applicability of the 12 specific 
requirements varies considerably across the 7 entity types. As a 
general matter, Congress has subjected those entities receiving the 
largest share of appropriated funds to most of the 12 specific 
governance, accountability, and transparency requirements we focused 
on, while those entities that generally did not directly receive 
appropriated funds were not subject to the 12 requirements. However, 
when considering those entity types which are not generally subject to 
the 12 specific requirements, it is important to recognize that 
individual entities within those types may be subject to comparable 
requirements as a result of other statutory or regulatory requirements. 
In addition, individual entities not subject to the 12 specific 
statutory requirements we considered may have voluntarily chosen to 
implement practices that would meet one or more of the specific 
requirements. Finally, it is also important to keep in mind that many 
of the statutes[Footnote 64] that established the 12 specific 
requirements we reviewed contained other requirements that strengthen 
governance, accountability, and transparency. 

Table 11: Applicability of Specific Governance, Accountability, and 
Transparency-Related Requirements to the Different Types of Federally 
Created Entities: 

Specific requirements[A]: Budget preparation, review, and approval; 
Entity Type: Executive departments: Yes; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: Most; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: Wholly owned GC only; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: No; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: No; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: No; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: No. 

Specific requirements[A]: Strategic and performance planning; 
Entity Type: Executive departments: Yes; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: Most; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: Yes; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: No; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: No; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: No; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: No. 

Specific requirements[A]: Internal audit; 
Entity Type: Executive departments: Yes; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: Many; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: Some; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: No; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: No; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: No; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: Some. 

Specific requirements[A]: Budget execution and funds control; 
Entity Type: Executive departments: Yes; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: Yes; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: Wholly owned GC only; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: No; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: No; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: No; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: No. 

Specific requirements[A]: Control of improper payments; 
Entity Type: Executive departments: Yes; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: Yes; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: Yes; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: No; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: No; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: No; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: No. 

Specific requirements[A]: Internal control and accounting systems; 
Entity Type: Executive departments: Yes; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: Yes; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: Yes; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: No; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: No; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: No; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: No. 

Specific requirements[A]: Preparation and reporting of audited 
financial statements; 
Entity Type: Executive departments: Yes; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: Yes; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: Yes; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: No; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: No; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: No; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: No. 

Specific requirements[A]: Standards of conduct; 
Entity Type: Executive departments: Yes; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: Yes; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: Yes; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: No; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: No; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: No; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: No. 

Specific requirements[A]: Whistleblower protection; 
Entity Type: Executive departments: Most; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: Most; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: Yes[B]; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: No; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: No; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: No; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: No. 

Specific requirements[A]: Access to public records; 
Entity Type: Executive departments: Yes; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: Yes; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: Yes; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: No; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: No; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: No; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: No. 

Specific requirements[A]: Availability of federal contract and grant 
information; 
Entity Type: Executive departments: Yes; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: Yes; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: Yes; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: No; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: No; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: No; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: No. 

Specific requirements[A]: Access to public meetings; 
Entity Type: Executive departments: N/A[C]; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: Yes[C]; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: Yes; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: No; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: No; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: No; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: No. 

Specific requirements[A]: Total number of entities identified (219); 
Entity Type: Executive departments: 15; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: 88; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: 23; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: 1[D]; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: 3; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: 39; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: 50. 

Specific requirements[A]: Percent of appropriated funds; 
Entity Type: Executive departments: 73.6; 
Entity Type: Other executive branch entities: 24.8; 
Entity Type: Government corporations: 1.5; 
Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities: -; 
Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprises: -; 
Entity Type: Federally funded research and development centers: -; 
Entity Type: Other federally established organizations: 0.1. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[A] The specific reform statutes applicable to each requirement can be 
found in table 10. As discussed elsewhere in the report, we did not 
review entity-specific or other statutes that might separately require 
a particular federally created entity to meet a particular governance, 
accountability, or transparency requirement comparable to any 1 of the 
12 requirements we identified. 

[B] Only part of the Whistleblower Protection Act applies to government 
corporations. That part relates to personnel actions taken with respect 
to a covered employee who makes a protected disclosure evidencing 
illegal or improper government activities. 

[C] This requirement only applies to executive agencies headed by a 
multiperson governing board. Thus, this requirement does not apply to 
executive departments, which are all headed by a single person (e.g., 
the Secretary of the Treasury or the Attorney General of the United 
States), and those other executive branch entities headed by a single 
person (e.g., the administrators of the Environmental Protection Agency 
and the General Services Administration). The requirement does, 
however, apply to all other executive branch entities headed by a multi-
person governing body (e.g., the board members of the National Science 
Foundation). 

[D] The actual number of NAFIs is unknown because federally created 
entities generally are not required to report publicly on their NAFIs, 
there is no official or commonly understood definition of a NAFI, and 
no source exists to identify each NAFI that may exist. For purposes of 
this report, we recognize NAFIs as a single entity. 

[End of table] 

Many Federally Created Entities Receive Federally Appropriated Funds: 

For fiscal years 2005 through 2008, Congress appropriated--on average--
approximately $4 trillion in federal funds directly to 129 federally 
created entities, which included entities from 4 of the 7 entity types. 
[Footnote 65] As shown in figure 1, for the 4 types that received 
appropriated funds, 

* The 15 executive departments, which represent 7 percent of the 219 
entities, received 73.6 percent (approximately $2.95 trillion) of the 
average annual total of appropriated funds. Of this amount, the 
Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Defense, and 
the Department of the Treasury received 79 percent (approximately $2.32 
trillion). 

* Seventy-nine of the 88 other executive branch entities received 24.8 
percent (approximately $996 billion) of the average annual total of 
appropriated funds. Of this amount, the Social Security Administration, 
the Office of Personnel Management, and the United States Postal 
Service received 87 percent (approximately $867 billion). 

* Eighteen of the 23 government corporations received 1.5 percent 
(approximately $60.9 billion) of the average annual total of 
appropriated funds. Of this amount, the Commodity Credit Corporation, 
the Tennessee Valley Authority, the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation, 
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the Pension Benefit 
Guaranty Corporation received 88 percent (approximately $53.7 billion). 

* Seventeen of the 50 other federally established organizations 
received less than 1 percent (approximately $4.1 billion) of the 
average annual total of appropriated funds. Of this amount, Amtrak, the 
Corporation of Public Broadcasting, the Legal Services Corporation, and 
the Smithsonian Institution received 70 percent (approximately $2.9 
billion). 

Figure 1: Appropriated Funding Information by Type of Entity for Fiscal 
Years 2005-2008: 

[Refer to PDF for image: pie-chart] 

Executive departments: 73.6%: ($2,955.0 billion); 
Other executive branch entities: 24.8%: ($995.5 billion); 
Government corporations: 1.5% ($60.9 billion); 
Other federally established organizations: 0.1% ($4.1 billion). 

Source: GAO analysis and summarization of appropriated funds provided 
to identified federally created entities based upon OMB’s MAX data, as 
of July 2009. 

[End of figure] 

Each of the 43 federally created entities in the remaining three entity 
types--Nonappropriated Fund Instrumentalities (NAFIs), Government- 
Sponsored Establishments (GSE), and the Federally Funded Research and 
Development Centers (FFRDCs)--did not receive appropriated funds during 
the 4 years we reviewed. NAFIs do not generally receive appropriated 
funds and, to the extent they receive other federal support, it usually 
is provided through less formal means, such as in-kind contributions 
from the federally created entities responsible for their establishment 
or payment for services rendered or goods sold under contract with 
federally created entities. While the GSEs we identified did not 
receive appropriated funds during the 4 years, concerns that the 
deteriorating financial condition of two GSEs--Fannie Mae and Freddie 
Mac--caused the Department of the Treasury and the Board of Governors 
of the Federal Reserve System, since September 2008, to make 
substantial financial commitments to support these institutions and 
help stabilize financial markets.[Footnote 66] Also, while FFRDCs 
receive a considerable share of their overall research and development 
funding from the federal government, that funding is provided through 
contracts and grants with other federally created entities. As a 
consequence, appendix II does not show any appropriated federal funds 
for FFRDCs, GSEs, or NAFIs. 

Table 12 presents for each of the seven types of federally created 
entities we identified, the total number of federally created entities, 
the number of entities identified as receiving appropriated funds, and 
the average amount and percent received. Appendix II provides a full 
list of entities within each type and appropriated funds for each 
entity between FY 2005 and FY 2008. 

Table 12: Appropriated Funding to Identified Federally Created Entities 
for Fiscal Years 2005-2008: 

Type of entity: Executive departments; 
Total number of identified federally created entities by type: 15; 
Total number of identified federally created entities receiving 
appropriated funds during the period by type: 15; 
Average annual appropriated funds for FY05-08 (dollars in billions): 
$2,955.0; 
Percentage of total average annual appropriated funds: 73.6. 

Type of entity: Other executive branch entities; 
Total number of identified federally created entities by type: 88; 
Total number of identified federally created entities receiving 
appropriated funds during the period by type: 79; 
Average annual appropriated funds for FY05-08 (dollars in billions): 
$995.5; 
Percentage of total average annual appropriated funds: 24.8. 

Type of entity: Government corporations; 
Total number of identified federally created entities by type: 23; 
Total number of identified federally created entities receiving 
appropriated funds during the period by type: 18; 
Average annual appropriated funds for FY05-08 (dollars in billions): 
$60.9; 
Percentage of total average annual appropriated funds: 1.5. 

Type of entity: Nonappropriated fund instrumentalities[A]; 
Total number of identified federally created entities by type: 1; 
Total number of identified federally created entities receiving 
appropriated funds during the period by type: 0; 
Average annual appropriated funds for FY05-08 (dollars in billions): 
[Empty]; 
Percentage of total average annual appropriated funds: [Empty]. 

Type of entity: Government-sponsored enterprises; 
Total number of identified federally created entities by type: 3; 
Total number of identified federally created entities receiving 
appropriated funds during the period by type: 0; 
Average annual appropriated funds for FY05-08 (dollars in billions): 
[Empty]; 
Percentage of total average annual appropriated funds: [Empty]. 

Type of entity: Federally funded research and development centers[B]; 
Total number of identified federally created entities by type: 39; 
Total number of identified federally created entities receiving 
appropriated funds during the period by type: 0; 
Average annual appropriated funds for FY05-08 (dollars in billions): 
[Empty]; 
Percentage of total average annual appropriated funds: [Empty]. 

Type of entity: Other federally established organizations; 
Total number of identified federally created entities by type: 50; 
Total number of identified federally created entities receiving 
appropriated funds during the period by type: 17; 
Average annual appropriated funds for FY05-08 (dollars in billions): 
$4.1; 
Percentage of total average annual appropriated funds: 0.1. 

Type of entity: Totals all entity types; 
Total number of identified federally created entities by type: 219; 
Total number of identified federally created entities receiving 
appropriated funds during the period by type: 129; 
Average annual appropriated funds for FY05-08 (dollars in billions): 
$4,015.5; 
Percentage of total average annual appropriated funds: 100. 

Source: GAO analysis and summarization based upon OMB's MAX data, as of 
July 2009. 

[A] The actual number of NAFIs is unknown because federally created 
entities generally are not required to report publicly on their NAFIs, 
there is no official or commonly understood definition of a NAFI, and 
no source exists to identify each NAFI that may exist. For purposes of 
this report, we recognize NAFIs as a single entity. 

[B] These entities receive contract or grant awards provided by other 
federally created entities. 

[End of table] 

Executive Departments: 

Together, the 15 executive departments received an annual average of 
$2.95 trillion in appropriated funds over the last 4 fiscal years (FYs 
2005-2008), which represented almost three quarters (73.6 percent) of 
the average annual $4.0 trillion over the period. As shown in figure 2, 
appropriated funds at executive departments increased from FY 2005 to 
FY 2008 by more than $857 billion, from just under $2.6 trillion to 
just over $3.4 trillion. The average appropriated funds provided to 14 
of the 15 executive departments increased from FY 2005 through FY 2008-
-the exception being the Department of Homeland Security which 
experienced a decline of approximately 42 percent in appropriated 
federal funds from $114.5 billion to $65.9 billion over the 4-year 
period.[Footnote 67] The major increases in appropriated funds went to 
the Department of the Treasury, which increased by $342 billion; the 
Department of Defense, which increased by $243 billion; and the 
Department of Health and Human Services, which increased by $235 
billion. 

Figure 2: Appropriated Funds for Executive Departments (FYs 2005-2008): 

[Refer to PDF for image: vertical bar graph] 

Fiscal year: 2005; 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $2,576.2. 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $2,891.0. 

Fiscal year: 2007; 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $2,919.1. 

Fiscal year: 2008. 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $3,433.6. 

Source: GAO analysis based upon MAX database. 

[End of figure] 

Other Executive Branch Entities: 

Seventy-nine of the 88 other executive branch entities collectively 
received an annual average of $995.5 billion in appropriated funds over 
the 4-year period (FYs 2005-2008), representing 24.8 percent of the 
total annual average of appropriations over the period. As shown in 
figure 3, appropriated funds received by other executive branch 
entities increased by approximately $146 billion, from $914 billion to 
over $1 trillion over the period. Most of the net increase in average 
annual appropriated funding for the other executive branch entities 
from FY 2005 to FY 2008 went to the Social Security Administration, 
which increased by $93 billion to $696 billion; the Office of Personnel 
Management, which increased by $20 billion to $145 billion; the 
Executive Office of the President, which increased by $16 billion to 
$36 billion; and the United States Postal Service, which increased by 
$14 billion to $86 billion. 

Figure 3: Appropriated Funds for Other Executive Branch Entities (FYs 
2005-2008): 

[Refer to PDF for image: vertical bar graph] 

Fiscal year: 2005; 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $914.3. 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $953.5. 

Fiscal year: 2007; 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $1,053.9. 

Fiscal year: 2008. 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $1,060.5. 

Source: GAO analysis based upon MAX database. 

[End of figure] 

Government Corporations: 

Eighteen of the 23 government corporations received an annual average 
of approximately $60.9 billion in appropriated funds over the 4-year 
period (FYs 2005-2008), which represented approximately 1.5 percent of 
the total annual average of appropriations over the period. As shown in 
figure 4, federal funding at the 18 government corporations that 
received appropriated funds decreased by $5.4 billion, from FY 2005 to 
FY 2008. While the Commodity Credit Corporation's (CCC's) portion of 
appropriated funding decreased by $18.2 billion from $39.2 billion in 
FY 2005 to $21 billion in FY 2008, increases for other government 
corporations--including $7 billion for the Federal Deposit Insurance 
Corporation, $2.7 billion for the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation, 
and $3.5 billion for the Tennessee Valley Authority--served to offset 
much of the decline experienced by CCC. 

Figure 4: Appropriated Funds for Government Corporations (FYs 2005- 
2008): 

[Refer to PDF for image: vertical bar graph] 

Fiscal year: 2005; 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $63.9. 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $64.6. 

Fiscal year: 2007; 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $56.6. 

Fiscal year: 2008. 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $58.5. 

Source: GAO analysis based upon MAX database. 

[End of figure] 

Other Federally Established Organizations: 

Collectively, 17 of the 50 other federally established organizations 
received an average of $4.1 billion in appropriated funds over the 4- 
year period (FYs 2005-2008) representing 0.10 percent of the total 
annual average of appropriated funds reviewed over the period. As shown 
in figure 5, average appropriated funding increased by over $600 
million for the 17 entities--from a combined $3.9 billion in FY 2005 to 
$4.5 billion in FY 2008. The net increase in federal funding from FY 
2005 to FY 2008 was primarily from changes in appropriated funds at the 
Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation, which increased by $366 million; 
Amtrak, which increased by $118 million; the Smithsonian Institution, 
which increased by $98 million; the U.S. Institute of Peace, which 
decreased by $90 million; and the Farm Credit System Insurance 
Corporation, which increased by $78 million. 

Figure 5: Appropriated Funds for Other Federally Established 
Organizations (FYs 2005-2008): 

[Refer to PDF for image: vertical bar graph] 

Fiscal year: 2005; 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $3.9. 

Fiscal year: 2006; 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $3.9. 

Fiscal year: 2007; 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $4.1. 

Fiscal year: 2008. 
Appropriated funds (dollars in billions): $4.5. 

Source: GAO analysis based upon MAX database. 

[End of figure] 

As agreed with your staff, unless you publicly announce the contents of 
this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days from 
the report date. We will then send copies to interested congressional 
committees and will also make copies available to others on request. In 
addition, the report will be available at no charge on the GAO Web site 
at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff have any questions concerning this report, please 
contact Susan Ragland at (202) 512-8486 or raglands@gao.gov or Susan A. 
Poling at (202) 512-2667 or polings@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. GAO staff who made key contributions to 
this report are listed in appendix IV. 

Sincerely yours, 

Signed by: 

Susan Ragland: 
Director, Financial Management and Assurance: 

Signed by: 

Susan A. Poling: 
Managing Associate General Counsel: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Our objectives were to identify the universe of federally created 
entities, categorize them by broad types, and identify broad-based 
statutory governance, accountability, and transparency requirements and 
related practices and determine their applicability to each type of 
federally created entity. In addition, for each federally created 
entity, we are providing information about recent levels of 
appropriations made directly available to them. 

Identification and Categorization of Federally Created Entities: 

To identify the universe of federally created entities, we reviewed 
relevant statutes and regulations, the Budget of the United States 
Government and related budget data maintained by the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB) for fiscal years 2005 through 2008, the 
United States Government Manual,[Footnote 68] the Federal Advisory 
Committee Act database maintained by the General Services 
Administration (GSA),[Footnote 69] OMB Circular No. A-136 (Financial 
Reporting Requirements), Department of the Treasury Federal Account 
Symbols and Titles Book, and relevant literature and Web sites, such as 
[hyperlink, http://www.usa.gov][Footnote 70] and [hyperlink, 
http://www.lib.lsu.edu/gov/index.html].[Footnote 71] For purposes of 
this report, we use the term "federally created entity" to mean an 
organization established under authority of the federal government that 
is charged with or has the authority to manage resources and carry out 
federal operations, activities, or objectives. We include such 
organizations only if they have a discrete identity that is separate 
and distinct from any other organization (e.g., not a component of an 
executive department). 

We excluded legislative and judicial branch organizations (e.g., the 
Government Printing Office and the Administrative Office of the United 
States Courts); organizations established under treaties or regional 
compacts (e.g., the Susquehanna River Basin Commission); and 
geographical federal political jurisdictions (e.g., U.S. territories 
and other insular areas, and the District of Columbia) because they 
have a status under the U.S. Constitution different than the federally 
created entities we included. We also excluded federal organizations 
composed of more than one existing federally created entity (e.g., 
interagency councils, such as the Financial Institutions Examination 
Council) and federal advisory organizations (e.g., the Social Security 
Advisory Board, regardless of whether they are subject to the Federal 
Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. appendix 2)) because they are governed 
by other federally created entities.[Footnote 72] In addition, we 
omitted many federally chartered corporations that received a 
congressional charter under Title 36 of the U.S. Code because these 
corporations were incorporated under state law by private parties 
before receiving their congressional charter (e.g., the Boy Scouts of 
America and the Vietnam Veterans of America, Inc.). We excluded 
entities that were created by entities that we identified as "other 
federally established organizations" (e.g., the Friends of the Legal 
Services Corporation established by the Legal Services Corporation) 
because the variation in their charters, oversight, and forms permitted 
us to identify and categorize only a small group of such entities that 
met our definition of a discrete organization that is separate from the 
entity that created it. We also excluded organizations established to 
carry out authorized covert intelligence or law enforcement activities. 
Because we did not review all statutes and articles of incorporation or 
similar filings related to the establishment of other federally 
established organizations, there may be other federally created 
entities that we did not identify. Under our approach, we identified 
219 federally created entities, which are listed in appendix II; 
however, we cannot conclude that we have identified all federally 
created entities. 

We then analyzed the 219 federally created entities to determine how 
they could be categorized. We first reviewed their enabling statutes 
and generally applicable entity definitions contained in Titles 5 and 
31 of the U.S. Code,[Footnote 73] as well as categorizations reflected 
in other statutes and research literature to assess a variety of 
possible entity types. For purposes of categorizing federally created 
entities for this report, we relied on statutes and regulations that 
list certain types of entities within their meaning (e.g., executive 
departments listed in 5 U.S.C. § 101). For the numerous federally 
created entities that were not covered by such provisions, we 
determined whether each entity was part of the executive, legislative, 
or judicial branch of the federal government by applying general 
constitutional and legal principles articulated by the federal courts. 
This categorization was solely for purposes of this report. We made no 
legal conclusions as to whether any entity was subject to any 
limitation, condition, or privilege of the federal government under the 
U.S. Constitution or met the definition of any type of entity covered 
by a particular statute. We identified types that generally convey the 
legal status and organizational structure of most federally created 
entities, as follows: 

* executive departments, as defined in Title 5 of the U.S. Code; 
[Footnote 74] 

* other executive branch entities, as a nonlegal definition of 
identifying entities in the executive branch that are not a sub-unit of 
a larger executive branch entity; 

* government corporations, as defined in GCCA (Chapter 91 of Title 31 
of the U.S. Code)[Footnote 75] and those subject by law to GCCA 
provisions applicable to wholly owned government corporations;[Footnote 
76] 

* government-sponsored enterprises, as defined in Title 2 of the U.S. 
Code,[Footnote 77] the Budget of the United States Government - 
Appendix, and relevant GAO and Congressional Research Service reports; 
[Footnote 78] 

* federally funded research and development centers, as defined in 
Title 48 of the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations, the Web site of the 
National Science Foundation, and relevant Congressional Research 
Service reports;[Footnote 79] 

* nonappropriated fund instrumentalities, as defined in enabling 
statutes and case law; and: 

* other federally created organizations, as a miscellaneous entity type 
for any federally created entity that did not fit into a more specific 
category of entity type. 

Identification of Governance, Accountability, and Transparency 
Requirements and Applicability to Types of Federally Created Entities: 

To determine the extent to which the various types of federally created 
entities are generally subject to key statutory requirements intended 
to improve governance, accountability, and transparency, we reviewed 
prior GAO reports and reports of the Congressional Research Service and 
other research on efforts to improve governance, accountability, and 
transparency in the federal government through broad-based statutory 
reform initiatives. The concepts of governance, accountability, and 
transparency, while different, are closely associated and frequently 
used together. To help differentiate them for purposes of our review, 
we defined public sector: 

* governance to be the process of providing leadership and direction to 
entities to help them carry out their organizational mission and 
operating objectives; 

* accountability to be the processes, mechanisms, and other means by 
which entity management carries out its programs and operations and 
demonstrates its stewardship over resources and performance; and: 

* transparency to be the means by which information needed to 
understand and monitor entity operations and activities is made 
available and accessible to the public and those charged with 
oversight. 

Using these definitions, we reviewed reports and other authoritative 
sources to identify key federal reform initiatives designed to 
strengthen governance, accountability, and transparency through the 
enactment of broad statutory requirements and implementation of related 
practices needed to carry out the requirements. In doing so, we 
identified 12 statutory reform requirements and related practices which 
we considered applicable to our review. 

To determine whether the 12 statutory governance, accountability, and 
transparency requirements and related practice areas were broadly 
applicable to each of the seven types of federally created entities, we 
reviewed statutes: (1) governing the nature and definition of each type 
of federally created entity and (2) establishing each of the 
requirements. For 8 of the 12 requirements, our review concentrated on 
the specific statute, as amended, establishing each requirement. The 
remaining 4 involved statutory requirements related to the preparation, 
audit, and public reporting of entitywide financial statements 
reflected in separate statutes, as amended--the Government Corporation 
Control Act, the Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990, the Government 
Management Reform Act of 1994, and the Accountability of Tax Dollars 
Act of 2002; budgeting and funds control, reflected in the 
Antideficiency Act and the Purpose Statute; budget preparation, review, 
and approval, prescribed under the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921, 
the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974, and the 
Government Corporation Control Act; and internal control and accounting 
systems, addressed by the Federal Managers' Financial Integrity Act of 
1982 and the Government Corporation Control Act. 

Because our review focused on broad-based applicability of the 
requirements to federally created entity types, we limited our review 
to statutes establishing the 12 broad-based requirements. As a result, 
we did not review other statutes (e.g., specific statutes establishing 
individual federally created entities) that might separately require a 
particular federally created entity to meet a particular governance, 
accountability, or transparency requirement comparable to any 1 of the 
12 requirements we identified. Accordingly, individual federally 
created entities in our universe might otherwise be required to 
implement a particular governance, accountability, or transparency 
requirement even though the other entities of the same type do not. 

Appropriated Funds for Identified Federally Created Entities: 

To identify recent levels of federal funds appropriated to the 219 
federally created entities we identified, we reviewed available data 
(referred to as MAX budget data) on appropriations developed for and 
maintained by OMB. For the purposes of this report, we defined recent 
appropriated funds as the total gross budget authority provided to the 
identified federally created entities for fiscal years 2005 through 
2008. We used the OMB MAX budget data to determine the amount of 
appropriated funds in the budget accounts that are identified by 
reference to each of the federally created entities we identified 
during our review. Many of the 129 federally created entities that were 
directly appropriated federal funds, particularly the 15 executive 
departments, had multiple budget account records per year in OMB's MAX 
budget data. Where applicable, we combined multiple records to arrive 
at a total for those identified entities with appropriated funds. These 
aggregated data for each identified entity are presented in appendix II 
and summarized by entity type in our report. 

Appropriated funds for many federally created entities may be used to 
establish and fund contract and grant obligations to other entities, 
including other federally created entities. However, the budgetary 
account data maintained by OMB generally do not identify the portion of 
appropriated funds a federally created entity uses to fund contracts, 
grants, and other commitments to another federally created entity. 
Therefore, our report presents only appropriated funds identified by 
the data in the MAX database as being provided to individual federally 
created entities we identified for fiscal years 2005 through 2008. 
Also, since the MAX budget database does not track gross budget 
authority less than $1 million, our report does not include funds 
appropriated to federally created entities below $1 million. 

We conducted this engagement in accordance with all sections of GAO's 
Quality Assurance Framework that were relevant to our objectives. The 
framework requires that we plan and perform the engagement to obtain 
sufficient and appropriate evidence to meet our stated objectives and 
to discuss any limitations in our work. We believe that the information 
and data obtained, and the analysis conducted, provide a reasonable 
basis for any findings in this report. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: List of Federally Created Entities with Budget Data: 

The combined MAX budget database for the 4 fiscal years we reviewed 
consisted of a total of 1,364 budget account records. Our review of the 
information contained in these records found that 129 of the 219 
federally created entities we identified were directly appropriated 
federal funds in at least 1 of the 4 years we reviewed. For the 90 
other federally created entities we identified, we did not identify any 
appropriated funds provided directly to them in the budget account 
records. Seven of the 129 entities received appropriated funds for 1 or 
more but not each of the 4 years we reviewed. 

Table 13 presents the results of our review and analysis of the MAX 
budget data covering fiscal years 2005 through 2008. For the 129 
federally created entities that were directly appropriated funds, the 
table reflects each entity's yearly total. When we could not identify 
from the yearly MAX budget data any funds appropriated to an identified 
entity, we placed a dash (-) in the table for that year. In all other 
instances, table 13 lists, by year, the total amount we identified as 
federal funds appropriated directly to each identified federally 
created entity within each identified type. 

Table 13: List of Federally Created Entities with Identified 
Appropriated Funds for Fiscal Years 2005-2008 (Dollars in millions): 

Entity Type: Executive department: 

Entity: Department of Agriculture; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $79,954; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $85,977; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $86,616; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $92,355. 

Entity: Department of Commerce; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $9,443; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $9,967; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $11,049; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $12,943. 

Entity: Department of Defense; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $739,152; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $863,355; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $875,513; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $982,057. 

Entity: Department of Education; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $82,126; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $107,099; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $82,526; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $82,566. 

Entity: Department of Energy; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $32,020; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $31,492; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $32,420; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $33,127. 

Entity: Department of Health and Human Services; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $767,162; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $921,377; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $926,419; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $1,002,198. 

Entity: Department of Homeland Security; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $114,563; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $46,278; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $55,635; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $65,915. 

Entity: Department of Housing and Urban Development; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $40,534; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $58,195; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $42,038; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $55,775. 

Entity: Department of the Interior; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $21,526; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $21,536; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $20,141; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $22,842. 

Entity: Department of Justice; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $27,494; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $29,063; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $31,533; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $31,813. 

Entity: Department of Labor; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $54,533; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $53,519; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $54,896; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $65,477. 

Entity: Department of State; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $19,007; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $20,236; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $24,256; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $30,758. 

Entity: Department of Transportation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $78,668; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $71,769; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $73,004; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $83,624. 

Entity: Department of the Treasury; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $432,379; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $489,897; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $514,901; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $774,472. 

Entity: Department of Veterans Affairs; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $77,687; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $81,227; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $88,186; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $97,659. 

Entity: Executive department totals; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $2,576,248; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $2,890,987; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $2,919,133; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $3,433,581. 

Entity Type: Other executive branch entity: 

Entity: Advisory Council on Historic Preservation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $7; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $7; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $6; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $7. 

Entity: American Battle Monuments Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $54; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $53; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $43; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $57. 

Entity: Appalachian Regional Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $72; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $72; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $74; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $82. 

Entity: Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $6; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $6; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $6; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $6. 

Entity: Armed Forces Retirement Home; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $67; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $542; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $57; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $58. 

Entity: Barry Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education 
Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $4; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $4; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $4; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $3. 

Entity: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Broadcasting Board of Governors; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $601; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $688; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $665; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $695. 

Entity: Central Intelligence Agency[A]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $239; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $245; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $256; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $263. 

Entity: Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $10; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $9; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $9; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $9. 

Entity: Christopher Columbus Fellowship Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $0; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $1. 

Entity: Commission for the Preservation of America's Heritage Abroad; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Commission of Fine Arts; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $9; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $9; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $9; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $10. 

Entity: Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe (a.k.a. The 
Helsinki Commission); 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Committee for Purchase From People Who Are Blind or Severely 
Disabled; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $5; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $5; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $5; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $5. 

Entity: Commodity Futures Trading Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $93; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $97; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $98; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $111. 

Entity: Consumer Product Safety Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $65; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $65; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $66; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $83. 

Entity: Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency for the District 
of Columbia; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $179; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $171; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $181; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $194. 

Entity: Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $20; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $22; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $22; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $22. 

Entity: Delta Regional Authority; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $6; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $12; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $12; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $13. 

Entity: Denali Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $141; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $115; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $118; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $99. 

Entity: D.C. Public Defender Service; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $30; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $31; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $33. 

Entity: Election Assistance Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $11; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $11; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $10; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $139. 

Entity: Environmental Protection Agency; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $10,075; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $10,119; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $9,546; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $9,430. 

Entity: Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $331; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $332; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $334; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $335. 

Entity: Executive Office of the President; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $20,425; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $22,179; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $55,588; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $36,172. 

Entity: Farm Credit Administration; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $41; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $44; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $44; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $45. 

Entity: Federal Communications Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $10,304; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $8,681; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $8,179; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $8,988. 

Entity: Federal Election Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $52; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $54; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $55; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $59. 

Entity: Federal Housing Finance Agency; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $6. 

Entity: Federal Labor Relations Authority; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $25; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $25; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $25; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $24. 

Entity: Federal Maritime Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $19; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $20; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $20; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $22. 

Entity: Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $47; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $45; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $44; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $46. 

Entity: Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $8; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $8; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $8; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $8. 

Entity: Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $92; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $80; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $80; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $98. 

Entity: Federal Trade Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $206; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $198; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $212; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $245. 

Entity: General Services Administration; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $18,399; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $18,175; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $18,326; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $19,880. 

Entity: Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $3; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $3; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $3; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $3. 

Entity: James Madison Memorial Fellowship Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $2; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $2; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $2; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $2. 

Entity: Japan-United States Friendship Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $2; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $2; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $2; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $2. 

Entity: Marine Mammal Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $2; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $3; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $3; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $3. 

Entity: Merit Systems Protection Board; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $37; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $38; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $39; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $41. 

Entity: Morris K. Udall Scholarship and Excellence in National 
Environmental Policy Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $8; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $8; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $10; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $12. 

Entity: National Aeronautics and Space Administration; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $17,196; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $17,516; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $17,514; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $18,213. 

Entity: National Archives and Records Administration; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $482; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $508; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $517; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $577. 

Entity: National Capital Planning Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $8; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $8; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $8; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $8. 

Entity: National Council on Disability; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $3; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $3; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $3; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $3. 

Entity: National Credit Union Administration; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $716; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $694; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $909; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $2,189. 

Entity: National Foundation on the Arts and the Humanities; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $548; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $527; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $523; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $563. 

Entity: National Labor Relations Board; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $250; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $250; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $252; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $252. 

Entity: National Mediation Board; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $12; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $12; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $12; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $13. 

Entity: National Science Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $5,708; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $5,826; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $6,178; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $6,362. 

Entity: National Transportation Safety Board; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $69; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $76; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $79; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $86. 

Entity: Northern Border Regional Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Northern Great Plains Regional Authority; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Nuclear Regulatory Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $676; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $746; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $831; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $935. 

Entity: Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $3; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $4; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $4; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $4. 

Entity: Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $11; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $10; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $10; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $11. 

Entity: Office of Government Ethics; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $11; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $11; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $11; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $12. 

Entity: Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $5; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $9; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $9; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $9. 

Entity: Office of Personnel Management; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $124,629; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $133,899; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $158,290; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $144,988. 

Entity: Office of Special Counsel; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $15; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $15; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $16; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $17. 

Entity: Office of the Director of National Intelligence; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $468; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $550; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $680; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $681. 

Entity: Office of the Federal Coordinator for Alaska Natural Gas 
Transportation Projects; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $0; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $0; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $2. 

Entity: Peace Corps; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $327; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $327; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $330; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $340. 

Entity: Postal Regulatory Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $11; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $13. 

Entity: Privacy and Civil Liberty Oversight Board; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $2. 

Entity: Railroad Retirement Board; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $10,849; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $11,305; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $12,131; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $12,310. 

Entity: Securities and Exchange Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $856; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $865; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $868; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $843. 

Entity: Selective Service System; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $26; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $25; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $25; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $22. 

Entity: Small Business Administration; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $4,650; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $3,152; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $1,887; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $2,352. 

Entity: Social Security Administration; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $602,962; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $628,556; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $662,396; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $695,795. 

Entity: Southeast Crescent Regional Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Southwest Border Regional Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: U.S. Agency for International Development; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $10,361; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $10,932; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $11,958; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $10,388. 

Entity: U.S. Arctic Research Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: United States Commission on Civil Rights; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $9; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $9; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $9; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $8. 

Entity: United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $11; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $11; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $12; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $13. 

Entity: United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $18; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $20; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $21; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $24. 

Entity: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $49; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $51; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $54; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $62. 

Entity: United States Interagency Council on Homelessness; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $2; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $2; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $2; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $2. 

Entity: United States International Trade Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $61; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $62; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $62; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $68. 

Entity: United States Postal Service; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $71,521; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $75,235; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $83,965; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $85,909. 

Entity: United States Tax Court; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $42; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $49; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $49; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $48. 

Entity: United States Trade and Development Agency; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $65; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $53; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $54; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $50. 

Entity: Utah Reclamation Mitigation and Conservation Commission; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $13; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $8; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $6; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $10. 

Entity: Vietnam Education Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $5; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $5; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $5; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $5. 

Entity: White House Commission on the National Moment of Remembrance; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Other executive branch entity totals; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $914,304; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $953,510; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $1,053,883; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $1,060,500. 

Entity Type: Government corporation: 

Entity: Wholly owned GCCA; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Commodity Credit Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $39,251; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $34,147; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $27,211; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $21,038. 

Entity: Community Development Financial Institutions Fund; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $60; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $55; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $56; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $96. 

Entity: Corporation for National and Community Service; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $1,088; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $1,096; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $1,029; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $1,023. 

Entity: Export-Import Bank of the United States; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $501; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $218; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $355; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $602. 

Entity: Federal Crop Insurance Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $3,478; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $4,499; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $5,737; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $6,214. 

Entity: Federal Housing Administration Fund; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Federal Prison Industries, Incorporated; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $843; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $791; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $978; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $982. 

Entity: Government National Mortgage Association; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $437; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $503; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $426; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $574. 

Entity: International Clean Energy Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Millennium Challenge Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $1,488; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $1,752; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $1,751; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $1,475. 

Entity: Overseas Private Investment Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $225; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $351; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $273; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $206. 

Entity: Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $3,477; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $7,062; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $4,112; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $3,311. 

Entity: Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $32; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $33; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $34; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $36. 

Entity: Tennessee Valley Authority; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $7,695; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $8,882; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $9,120; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $11,251. 

Entity: Mixed-ownership, GCCA; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $2,828; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $2,793; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $3,022; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $9,829. 

Entity: Federal Home Loan Banks; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $232; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $307; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $315; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $354. 

Entity: Financing Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Credit Union Administration Central Liquidity 
Facility; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Resolution Funding Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $2,130; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $1,979; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $1,987; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $1,393. 

Entity: Non-GCCA; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: African Development Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $22; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $25; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $27; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $35. 

Entity: Inter-American Social Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $23; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $23; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $22; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $28. 

Entity: Presidio Trust; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $79; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $86; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $95; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $102. 

Entity: Valles Caldera Trust; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Government corporation totals; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $63,889; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $64,602; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $56,550; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $58,549. 

Entity Type: Nonappropriated fund instrumentality: 

Entity: Nonappropriated Fund Instrumentalities (NAFIs are treated as 
one entity for purposes of this report); 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Nonappropriated fund instrumentality totals; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity Type: Government-sponsored enterprise: 

Entity: Fannie Mae (formerly known as the Federal National Mortgage 
Association); 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation (Farmer Mac); 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac); 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $-. 

Entity: Government-sponsored enterprise totals; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity Type: Federally funded research and development center: 

Entity: Aerospace Federally Funded Research and Development Center; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Ames Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Argonne National Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Arroyo Center; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Brookhaven National Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: C3I Federally Funded Research & Development Center; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Center for Advanced Aviation System Development; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Center for Naval Analyses; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Center for Nuclear Waste Regulatory Analyses; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Homeland Security Studies and Analysis Institute; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Homeland Security Systems Engineering and Development 
Institute; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Institute for Defense Analyses Communications and Computing 
Federally Funded Research and Development Center; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Institute for Defense Analyses Studies Federally Funded 
Research and Development Center; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Federally Funded Research and 
Development Center; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Jet Propulsion Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Lincoln Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Los Alamos National Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Biodefense Analysis & Countermeasures Center; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Cancer Institute at Frederick; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Center for Atmospheric Research; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Defense Research Institute; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Optical Astronomy Observatories; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Radio Astronomy Observatory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Renewable Energy Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Oak Ridge National Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Project Air Force; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Sandia National Laboratories; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Savannah River Technology Center; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Science and Technology Policy Institute; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Software Engineering Institute; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Stanford Linear Accelerator Center; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Federally funded research and development center totals; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity Type: Other federally established organization: 

Entity: Agricultural Commodity Organizations (e.g., U.S. Popcorn 
Board); 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Agricultural Credit Bank; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Alaska Native Corporations (195); 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: American National Red Cross; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: American Registry of Pathology; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Amtrak; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $1,207; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $1,304; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $1,293; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $1,325. 

Entity: Congressional Award Board; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Corporation for the Promotion of Rifle Practice and Firearms 
Safety; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Corporation for Public Broadcasting; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $466; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $460; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $465; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $448. 

Entity: Farm Credit Banks (5); 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $176; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $148; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $271; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $254. 

Entity: Federal Farm Banks Funding Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Federal Reserve Banks (12); 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Foundation for the National Institutes of Health; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Gallaudet University; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $105; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $107; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $107; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $113. 

Entity: Help America Vote Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military 
Medicine; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Howard University; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $239; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $238; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $237; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $233. 

Entity: Institute of American Indian and Alaska Native Culture and 
Arts; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $6; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $6; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $6; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $7. 

Entity: In-Q-Tel; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: International Center for Middle-Eastern-Western Dialogue; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $7; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $5; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Legal Services Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $332; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $328; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $350; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $351. 

Entity: Military Relief Associations (e.g., Army Emergency Relief); 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Academy of Sciences; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Consumer Cooperative Bank (dba NCB); 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Exchange Carriers Association; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Fallen Firefighters Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Fish and Wildlife Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Forest Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Foundation for the Centers for Disease Control and 
Prevention (a.k.a. CDC Foundation); 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Fund for Excellence in American Indian Education; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Fund for Medical Education; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Park Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Recording Preservation Foundation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: National Technical Institute for the Deaf; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $56; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $56; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $56; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $60. 

Entity: National Veterans Business Development Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $2; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $1; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $1; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $1. 

Entity: Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $114; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $117; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $117; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $480. 

Entity: OnPoint Technologies; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Public Company Accounting Oversight Board; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $129; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $131; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $126; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $130. 

Entity: Reagan-Udall Foundation for the Food and Drug Administration; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Red Planet Capital; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Securities Investor Protection Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: Smithsonian Institution; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $763; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $766; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $787; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $861. 

Entity: Telecommunications Development Fund; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $2; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $5; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $5; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $5. 

Entity: United States Capitol Historical Society; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: United States Enrichment Corporation; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: United States Institute of Peace; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $122; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $25; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $26; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $32. 

Entity: United States Olympic Committee; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: [Empty]; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: [Empty]. 

Entity: United States State Justice Institute; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $5; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $4; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $3; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $4. 

Entity: VA Research and Education Centers; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $187; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $227; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $230; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $216. 

Entity: Other federally established organization totals; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $3,918; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $3,928; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $4,080; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $4,520. 

Total appropriated funds for federally created entities; 
Appropriated funds FY 2005: $$3,558,359; 
Appropriated funds FY 2006: $$3,913,027; 
Appropriated funds FY 2007: $$4,033,646; 
Appropriated funds FY 2008: $$4,557,150. 

Source: GAO analysis of the MAX budget database. 

[A] For the CIA, the identified appropriated funds were for its 
retirement and disability system fund. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Relevant GAO Reports: 

Freedom of Information Act: DHS Has Taken Steps to Enhance Its Program, 
but Opportunities Exist to Improve Efficiency and Cost-Effectiveness. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-260]. Washington D.C.: 
March 2009. 

Designated Federal Entities: Survey of Governance Practices and the 
Inspector General Role. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-270]. Washington D.C.: April 2009. 

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Analysis of Options for Revising the 
Housing Enterprise's Long-term Structures. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-782]. Washington, D.C.: September 
2009. 

Improving the Federal Government's Financial Management Systems. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-447SP]. Washington D.C.: 
April 2008. 

Intercity Passenger Rail: National Policy and Strategies Needed to 
Maximize Public Benefits from Federal Expenditures. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-15]. Washington D.C.: November 2006. 

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation: Human Capital and Risk 
Assessment Programs Appear Sound, but Evaluations of Their 
Effectiveness Should Be Improved. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-255]. Washington D.C.: February 
2007. 

Federal Financial Management: Critical Accountability and Fiscal 
Stewardship Challenges Facing Our Nation. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GA0-07-542T]. Washington D.C.: March 2007. 

Federal Oversight: The Need for Good Governance, Transparency, and 
Accountability. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-788CG]. 
Washington D.C.: April 2007. 

Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation: Governance Structure Needs 
Improvements to Ensure Policy Direction and Oversight. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-808]. Washington D.C.: July 2007. 

Legal Services Corporation: Governance and Accountability Practices 
Need to Be Modernized and Strengthened. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-993]. Washington D.C.: August 2007. 

Smithsonian Institution: Status of Efforts to Address a Range of 
Funding and Governance Challenges. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-250T]. Washington D.C.: December 
2007. 

Suggested Areas for Oversight for the 110th Congress. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-235R]. Washington D.C.: November 
2006. 

Corporate Governance: NCUA's Controls and Related Procedures for Board 
Independence and Objectivity Are Similar to Other Financial Regulators, 
but Opportunities Exist to Enhance Its Governance Structure. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-72R]. Washington D.C.: 
November 2006. 

Amtrak: Management and Accountability Issues Contribute to 
Unprofitability of Food and Beverage Service. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-761T]. Washington D.C.: June 2005. 

A Glossary of Terms Used in the Federal Budget Process. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-734SP]. Washington D.C.: September 
2005. 

Amtrak Management: Systemic Problems Require Actions to Improve 
Efficiency, Effectiveness, and Accountability. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-145]. Washington D.C.: October 2005. 

CFO ACT OF 1990 Driving the Transformation of Federal Financial 
Management. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-242T]. 
Washington D.C.: November 2005. 

Purpose Statute Violation: Veterans Affairs Improperly Funded Certain 
Cost Comparison Studies with VHA Appropriations. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-124R]. Washington D.C.: November 
2005. 

Results-Oriented Government: GPRA Has Established a Solid Foundation 
for Achieving Greater Results. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-38]. Washington D.C.: March 2004. 

The Federal Workforce: Observations on Protections from Discrimination 
and Reprisal for Whistleblowing. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-01-715T]. Washington D.C.: May 2001. 

Government Corporations: Profiles of Recent Proposals. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-95-57FS]. Washington D.C.: March 
1995. 

Managing for Results: Strengthening Financial and Budgetary Reporting. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/T-AIMD-95-181]. Washington 
D.C.: July 1995. 

Budget Process: History and Future Directions. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/T-AIMD-95-24]. Washington D.C.: July 
1995. 

Government Corporations: Profiles of Existing Government Corporations. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-96-14]. Washington 
D.C.: December 1995. 

Profiles of Existing Government Corporations. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/AFMD-89-43FS]. Washington D.C.: December 
1988. 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Susan Ragland (202) 512-8486 or raglands@gao.gov: 

Susan A. Poling (202) 512-2667 or polings@gao.gov: 

Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the people named above, John Reilly, Assistant Director, 
F. Abe Dymond, Assistant General Counsel, Jehan Abdel-Gawad, Lisa Crye, 
Lauren S. Fassler, John Lopez, Chelsea Lounsbury, Kimberly McGatlin, 
Richard Meadows, Emily Wold, and Matthew Zaun made key contributions to 
this report. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] We define an "organization" as an association of individuals 
working together for common ends under a group identity. For more 
explanation about these definitions, see appendix I. 

[2] For example, the James Madison Memorial Fellowship Foundation was 
established by the James Madison Memorial Fellowship Act. See Pub. L. 
No. 99-500, § 803, 100 Stat. 1783-76 (Oct. 18, 1986) (codified, as 
amended, at 20 U.S.C. § 4502). By contrast, the U.S. Popcorn Board, one 
the agricultural commodity organizations, was established by an order 
of the Secretary of Agriculture. See 7 C.F.R. pt. 1215. 

[3] The 12 requirements we identified were budget preparation, review, 
and approval; strategic and performance planning; internal audit; 
budget execution and funds control; control of improper payments; 
internal control and accounting systems; preparing and reporting 
audited financial statements; standards of conduct; whistleblower 
protection; access to public records; availability of federal contract 
and grant information; and access to public meetings. 

[4] For purposes of this report, we considered appropriated funds to be 
available for the direct use of a federally created entity if OMB's MAX 
budget database included a budget account for the entity. In most 
cases, such accounts reflect authority granted to federally created 
entities to spend or commit the government to spending funds from the 
U.S. Treasury. In other cases, such accounts reflect authority for 
direct payments out of the U.S. Treasury to or for the benefit of 
federally created entities. In some cases, the accounts reflect 
authority for a federally created entity to borrow funds and spend 
them, enter into contracts in advance of an appropriation, and to spend 
offsetting receipts and collections. While most appropriated funds are 
deposited and expended from appropriation accounts in the U.S. 
Treasury, some are deposited and expended out of commercial accounts. 
Of the latter, our report includes only amounts that are tracked in 
OMB's MAX budget database budgetary accounts. 

[5] The U.S. Constitution refers to "departments" at least three times. 
U.S. Const., art. I, § 8, cl. 18; art. II, § 2, cls. 1 and 2; see also 
U.S. Const. amend. XXV. The Department of the Treasury was established 
in September 1789. 1 Stat. 65 (1 Cong. ch. 12) (Sept. 2, 1789) (An Act 
to Establish the Treasury Department). 

[6] Federally created entities are sometimes named or referred to in 
law as "federal agencies," "executive agencies," "establishments," 
"instrumentalities," "corporations," "trusts," and other terms. 

[7] Homeland Security Act of 2002, Pub. L. No. 107-296, 116 Stat. 2135 
(Nov. 25, 2002) (codified, in part, at 6 U.S.C. §§ 111, 313, 468). 

[8] See e.g., Luxton v. North River Bridge Co., 153 U.S. 525 (1894); 
Smith v. Kansas City Title Co., 255 U.S. 180 (1921); McCulloch v. 
Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat) 316 (1819). 

[9] Notwithstanding a statutory provision stating that an entity is not 
to be considered a federal agency or instrumentality under law, a 
federally created entity may be considered part of the federal 
government for certain constitutional purposes. See, for example, the 
case of Lebron v. Nat'l R.R. Passenger Corp., 513 U.S. 374 (1995), in 
which the U.S. Supreme Court held that where "the [U.S.] Government 
creates a corporation [AMTRAK] by special law, for the furtherance of 
governmental objectives, and retains for itself permanent authority to 
appoint a majority of the directors of that corporation, the 
corporation is part of the [U.S.] Government for purposes of the First 
Amendment [of the U.S. Constitution]." 513 U.S. at 400. 

[10] A number of court cases address the question of whether federally 
created entities, given certain attributes, may carry out functions 
assigned to the executive branch under the U.S. Constitution. See, 
e.g., Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority v. Citizens for the 
Abatement of Aircraft Noise, Inc., 501 U.S. 252 (1991); Mistretta v. 
United States, 488 U.S. 361 (1989); Bowsher v. Synar, 478 U.S. 714 
(1986); Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1 (1976); Springer v. Government of 
the Philippine Islands, 277 U.S. 189 (1928). 

[11] See Standard Oil Co. v. Johnson, 316 U.S. 481 (1942) 
(nonappropriated fund instrumentality, a U.S. Army post exchange, 
entitled to federal sovereign immunity); Reconstruction Finance Corp. 
v. J.G. Menihan Corp., 312 U.S. 81 (1941) (government corporation 
entitled to federal sovereign immunity).  

[12] Congress uses and defines various terms for the purpose of 
prescribing the applicability of a given law or set of laws to certain 
types of federally created entities. For example, as noted by the U.S. 
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, the Smithsonian 
Institution, created by law as "an establishment," meets the definition 
of "federal agency" for one statute, "instrumentality wholly owned by 
the United States" under another statute, but does not meet the 
definition of "agency" under a third statute. Dong v. Smithsonian 
Inst., 125 F.3d 877 (D.C. Cir. 1997), cert. denied, 524 U.S. 922 
(1998). 

[13] See Marshall J. Breger and Gary J. Edles, Established by Practice: 
The Theory and Operation of Independent Federal Agencies, 52 Admin. L. 
Rev. 1111 (Fall 2000). Congress also considers the entities' legal 
characteristics, such as their status as governmental or 
nongovernmental. See Library of Congress, Congressional Research 
Service, The Quasi Government: Hybrid Organizations with Both 
Government and Private Sector Legal Characteristics, No. RL30533 (Feb. 
17, 2009). 

[14] Certain types of appropriations are not considered to provide 
budget authority, such as an appropriation to liquidate obligations 
incurred against contract authority, because they do not provide 
authority to incur obligations. See GAO, A Glossary of Terms Used in 
the Federal Budget Process, GAO-05-734SP, at 21 (Washington, D.C.: 
September 2005). 

[15] U.S. Const., Art. I, § 9, cl. 7. 

[16] See appendix I. 

[17] 5 U.S.C. § 101. 

[18] See, for example, the current Cabinet and Cabinet-level members at 
[hyperlink, http://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/cabinet/] (last 
visited Oct. 23, 2009). 

[19] See 3 U.S.C. § 19. 

[20] Act of Sept. 15, 1789, 1 Stat. 68 (1 Cong. Ch. 14) (Sept. 15, 
1789); Department of Education Organization Act, Pub. L. No. 96-88, 93 
Stat. 668 (Oct. 17, 1979). 

[21] Executive Order No. 8248 (Sept. 8, 1939), Establishing the 
Divisions of the Executive Office of the President and Defining their 
Functions and Duties. 

[22] Three of the other executive branch entities were established 
during fiscal year 2009, so they did not receive any appropriated funds 
during the fiscal years (2005-2008) we reviewed for this report. These 
entities are the Southeast Crescent Regional Commission, the Southwest 
Border Regional Commission, and the Northern Border Regional 
Commission. 

[23] The U.S. Supreme Court opinion in Lebron v. Nat'l R.R. Passenger 
Corp., 513 U.S. 374 (1995), briefly describes the historical evolution 
of government corporations. The U.S. Supreme Court opinion in the case 
of Luxton v. North River Bridge Co., 153 U.S. 525 (1894), describes 
their use up to 1894. For a more detailed history, see the section on 
government use of corporate entities (chapter 15.B.) of GAO, 3 
Principles of Federal Appropriations Law, 3RD ed., GAO-08-978SP, at 15- 
61 through 15-226 (Washington, D.C.: September 2008). 

[24] Some of the government corporations listed in GCCA have been 
terminated, and we omit them from this report. 

[25] See, for example, the statute establishing the African Development 
Foundation as a non-GCCA corporation: "There is established a body 
corporate to be known as the 'African Development Foundation,'" which 
"shall be subject to the provisions of chapter 91 of title 31 
applicable to wholly owned Government Corporations." 22 U.S.C. §§ 290h- 
1, 290h-6. Similarly, see the statute establishing the Presidio Trust 
as a non-GCCA corporation: "There is established a wholly owned 
government corporation to be known as the Presidio Trust," which "shall 
be treated as a wholly owned government corporation subject to chapter 
91 of title 31, United States Code." Omnibus Parks and Public Lands 
Management Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-333, div. I, tit. I, § 103, 10 
Stat. 4093, 4098-4101 (Nov. 12, 1996) (reprinted in 16 U.S.C. § 460bb 
note). 

[26] See GAO, Government Corporations: Profiles of Existing Government 
Corporations, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-96-14], 
at 3 (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 13, 1995). In this prior report, we noted 
variations in accepted definitions of a government corporation. These 
differ from the definition we applied. See appendix I. 

[27] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-96-14], at 3. 

[28] Millennium Challenge Act of 2003, Pub. L. No. 108-199, div. D, 
tit. VI, § 602, 118 Stat. 3, 211 (Jan. 23, 2004) (codified at 22 U.S.C. 
§ 7701). 

[29] See Department of Defense Instruction 1330.21, Armed Services 
Exchange Regulations, July 14, 2005, and Department of Defense 
Instruction 1015.15, Establishment, Management, and Control of 
Nonappropriated Fund Instrumentalities and Financial Management of 
Supporting Resources, rev. March 20, 2008. 

[30] An extensive history of the evolution and use of NAFIs is provided 
in GAO, Principles of Federal Appropriations Law, 3RD ed., [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-978SP], at pages 15-226 through 15-
276 (Washington, D.C.: September 2008). As noted in that history, GAO 
conducted a survey in 1977 and reported on dozens of NAFIs identified 
across the executive branch; however, the report noted the lack of a 
precise definitional distinction between a NAFI and a private 
organization operating at a federally created entity. See GAO, 
Magnitude of Nonappropriated Fund and Related Activities In The 
Executive Branch, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/FPCD-77-28] 
(Washington, D.C.: Apr. 25, 1977). The number and nature of NAFIs have 
changed since then. For example, the 1977 report listed 10 NAFIs 
operating at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy. We reported this year 
that the Academy had 14 NAFIs. GAO, United States Merchant Marine 
Academy: Internal Control Weaknesses Resulted in Improper Sources and 
Uses of Funds; Some Corrective Actions Are Under Way, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-635] (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 10, 
2009). 

[31] See, for example, GAO, A Glossary of Terms Used in the Federal 
Budget Process, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-734SP], 
at 59 (Washington, D.C.: September 2005); Congressional Research 
Service, Government-Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs): An Institutional 
Overview, RS21663 (Sept. 29, 2009); GAO, Financial Services 
Institutions: Information for Assessing the Government's Potential 
Financial Exposure, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/GGD-98-125], at 3 (Washington, D.C.: 
June 15, 1998). 

[32] 2 U.S.C. § 622(8). 

[33] See, for example, GAO, Government-Sponsored Enterprises: A 
Framework for Strengthening GSE Governance and Oversight, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-269T] (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 10, 
2004). 

[34] See GAO, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Analysis of Options for 
Revising the Housing Enterprises' Long-term Structures, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-782], at 1, 9 (Washington, D.C.: 
Sept. 10, 2009). The Department of the Treasury also acquired warrants 
(options) to purchase up to 79.9 percent of the common stock of Fannie 
Mae and Freddie Mac. 

[35] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-782]. 

[36] Two FFRDCs were established during fiscal year 2009, so they did 
not receive any appropriated funds during the fiscal years (2005-2008) 
we reviewed for this report. These entities are the Homeland Security 
Systems Engineering and Development Institute and the Homeland Security 
Studies and Analysis Institute. 

[37] See 48 C.F.R. § 35.017; 71 Comp. Gen. 155 (1992); see also 
Congressional Research Service, The Quasi Government: Hybrid 
Organizations with Both Government and Private Sector Legal 
Characteristics, RL30533, at 10-12 (Feb. 17, 2009). 

[38] See [hyperlink, http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/ffrdc/] (last 
visited Oct. 23, 2009). Pursuant to federal policy, the National 
Science Foundation maintains the federal government's master list of 
FFRDCs. 48 C.F.R. § 35.017-6. 

[39] See 36 U.S.C. chapters 407, 1526, 1503, 1513, 1519, 1524, 2203, 
2205. The entities are the (1) Corporation for the Promotion of Rifle 
Practice and Firearms Safety, (2) Help America Vote Foundation, (3) 
National Academy of Sciences, (4) National Fallen Firefighters 
Foundation, (5) National Fund for Medical Education, (6) National 
Recording Preservation Foundation, (7) United States Capitol Historical 
Society, and (8) United States Olympic Committee. Many other 
corporations received a congressional charter under Title 36, including 
the Boy Scouts of America and the Vietnam Veterans of America, Inc., 
after they were incorporated under state law by private parties. 
Because these entities were established prior to receiving their 
congressional charter, we did not consider them to be federally created 
entities. 

[40] The 12 specific requirements are among a number of laws governing 
the administration of various types of federally created entities, 
generally originating out of the administration of the traditional 
executive departments. These laws are sometimes referred to as "general 
management laws" or "administrative laws." For one compilation of many 
such laws, see Congressional Research Service, General Management Laws: 
A Compendium, RL30795 (May 19, 2004). 

[41] This act, which requires the President to annually submit a 
proposed budget of the U.S. government to Congress and federal agencies 
to submit a proposed budget to the President, is codified, as amended, 
in part, at 31 U.S.C. §§ 1104-09. 

[42] This act, which requires Congress to annually review the 
President's budget proposal and adopt a concurrent resolution on the 
budget of the U.S. government, is codified, as amended, in part, at 2 
U.S.C. §§ 631-32. 

[43] GCCA requires wholly owned government corporations to submit a 
business-type budget to the President each year and the President to 
include such budgets in the proposed budget of the U.S. government. 31 
U.S.C. § 9103. The act also requires Congress to take action on wholly 
owned government corporations' budgets. 31 U.S.C. § 9104. 

[44] Pub. L. No. 103-62, §§ 3, 4, 7, 107 Stat. 285, 286-89, 292-94 
(Aug. 3, 1993) (codified, as amended, at 5 U.S.C. § 306; 31 U.S.C. §§ 
1115-16; and, for the U.S. Post Office, 39 U.S.C. §§ 2802-04). 

[45] See 31 U.S.C. § 1115(g); 5 U.S.C. § 306(f); and for the U.S. Post 
Office, 39 U.S.C. §§ 2802-04. 

[46] OMB has issued guidance on submitting required GPRA plans and 
reports in OMB Circular No. A-11, Preparation, Submission and Execution 
of the Budget, at Part 6, Preparation and Submission of Strategic 
Plans, Annual Performance Plans, and Annual Program Performance Reports 
(Aug. 7, 2009); and OMB Circular No. A-136, Financial Reporting 
Requirements (June 10, 2009). 

[47] To carry out these functions, the IG Act provides for the 
establishment of offices of inspector general in certain 
"establishments" and "designated federal entities" that are defined by 
lists in the act. The act also requires all other "federal entities" to 
issue annual reports on any actions they may have voluntarily taken to 
implement such functions during the preceding year. Subject to certain 
exceptions, the IG Act defines the term "federal entity" as "any 
Government corporation (within the meaning of section 103(1) of title 
5, United States Code), any Government controlled corporation (within 
the meaning of section 103(2) of such title), or any other entity in 
the Executive branch of the Government, or any independent regulatory 
agency" that is not an "establishment" or a "designated federal 
entity." For purposes of our review, we did not consider the annual 
reporting requirement for "federal entities" to be an internal audit 
requirement. 

[48] Codified, as amended, at 31 U.S.C. § 1301(a). 

[49] Codified, as amended, at 31 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1342, 1351, 1514, 
1517. 

[50] Improper payments are payments that should not have been made or 
were made for incorrect amounts. They include errors, such as duplicate 
payments, payments for unsupported or inadequately supported claims, 
payments for services not rendered or to ineligible beneficiaries, and 
payments resulting from fraud or abuse. 

[51] See S. Rep. No. 107-333 (Nov. 4, 2002); Pub. L. No. 107-300, 116 
Stat. 2350 (Nov. 26, 2002) (reprinted in 31 U.S.C. § 3321 note); see 
also OMB, Issuance of Appendix C to OMB Circular A-123: Requirements 
for Effective Measurement and Remediation of Improper Payments, M-06-23 
(Aug. 10, 2006). 

[52] FMFIA charges GAO with issuing internal control standards and OMB 
with issuing guidance to agencies on their assessment of their internal 
controls. For the current standards and guidance, see, respectively 
GAO, Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1] 
(Washington, D.C.: November 1999), and OMB Circular No. A-123, 
Management's Responsibility for Internal Control (Dec. 21, 2004). 

[53] 31 U.S.C. § 9106. 

[54] Codified, as amended, in part, at 31 U.S.C. §§ 9105-06. 

[55] Pub. L. No. 101-576, 104 Stat. 2838 (Nov. 15, 1990) (codified, as 
amended, in part, at 31 U.S.C. § 3515). 

[56] Pub. L. No. 103-356, 108 Stat. 3410 (Oct. 13, 1994) (codified, as 
amended, in part, at 31 U.S.C. § 3515). 

[57] Pub. L. No. 107-289, 116 Stat. 2049 (Nov. 7, 2002) (codified at 31 
U.S.C. § 3515). 

[58] For a list of the entities OMB views as currently subject to 
financial reporting requirements under the GCCA, GRMA, CFO Act, or 
ATDA, see OMB Bulletin No. 07-04, Audit Requirements for Federal 
Financial Statements, appendixes A, C, D (Sept. 4, 2007, as revised by 
M-08-24, Aug. 25, 2008). 

[59] Pub. L. No. 95-521, 92 Stat. 1824 (Oct. 26, 1978) (codified, as 
amended, in part at 5 U.S.C. Appendix); Pub. L. No. 101-194, 103 Stat. 
1716 (Nov. 30, 1989) (codified, as amended, in part at 18 U.S.C. § 
207). 

[60] Pub. L. No. 101-12, 103 Stat. 16 (Apr. 10, 1989) (codified, as 
amended, in part at 5 U.S.C. § 2302). 

[61] Codified, as amended, at 5 U.S.C. § 552. 

[62] Pub. L. No. 109-282, 120 Stat. 1186 (Sept. 26, 2006) (reprinted in 
31 U.S.C. § 6101 note). 

[63] Pub. L. No. 94-409, 90 Stat. 1241 (Sept. 13, 1976) (codified, as 
amended, at 5 U.S.C. § 552b). 

[64] For example, the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921, as amended; 
the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974, as 
amended; GCCA, as amended; and the Chief Financial Officers Act of 
1990, as amended, each contain requirements other than those we 
identified for this report. 

[65] The appropriated funds made available to the 129 federally created 
entities represented on average 99.7 percent of all appropriated funds 
recorded in OMB's Max budget database over the 4-year period we 
reviewed. The remaining 0.3 percent went to entities outside the scope 
of our review, such as legislative and judicial branch entities, 
federal advisory organizations, and entities that ceased operations 
during the period of the review. 

[66] At the end of fiscal year 2008, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were 
placed into conservatorship by the Federal Housing Finance Agency and 
received substantial support from the Department of the Treasury and 
the Federal Reserve System. See GAO, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: 
Analysis of Options for Revising the Housing Enterprises' Long-term 
Structures, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-782] 
(Washington, D.C.: Sept. 10, 2009). 

[67] This decrease was due to disaster relief provided by one DHS 
component, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, for the major 
hurricanes that occurred in FY 2005. 

[68] The United States Government Manual is published annually by the 
Office of the Federal Register, a component of the National Archives 
and Records Administration. 1 C.F.R. §§ 2.5(c), 9.1. The Manual is 
described "as the official handbook of the Federal Government [that] 
provides comprehensive information on the agencies of the legislative, 
judicial, and executive branches. The Manual also includes information 
on quasiofficial agencies; international organizations in which the 
United States participates; and boards, commissions, and committees." 
See the preface to the United States Government Manual 2008/2009, 
available at [hyperlink, http://www.gpoaccess.gov/gmanual/index.html] 
(last visited Oct. 24, 2009). 

[69] See [hyperlink, http://www.fido.gov/facadatabase/] (last visited 
Oct. 24, 2009). 

[70] The General Services Administration maintains this Web site and 
states that it is "the U.S. government's official web portal." See 
[hyperlink, http://www.usa.gov/Agencies/federal.shtml] (last visited 
Oct. 24, 2009). 

[71] The Louisiana State University, working with the Federal 
Depository Library Program of the U.S. Government Printing Office, 
provides a list of federal agency Web sites. See [hyperlink, 
http://www.lib.lsu.edu/gov/scope.html] (last visited Oct. 24, 2009). 

[72] There is no source that identifies all interagency organizations. 
According to the General Services Administration, there are at least 
1,000 federal advisory committees operating per year in support of and 
under the supervision of federally created entities, as provided for 
under the Federal Advisory Committee Act, which is codified in an 
appendix to Title 5 of the U.S. Code. See [hyperlink, 
http://www.gsa.gov/Portal/gsa/ep/contentView.do?contentType=GSA_OVERVIEW
&contentId=9673] (last visited Oct. 24, 2009). 

[73] 5 U.S.C. §§ 101 (executive department), 103 (government 
corporation), 104 (independent establishment in the executive branch), 
105 (executive agency); 31 U.S.C. §§ 101 (agency), 102 (executive 
agency). 

[74] 5 U.S.C. § 101. 

[75] 31 U.S.C. § 9101. 

[76] See, for example, the statute establishing the African Development 
Foundation as a non-GCCA corporation: "There is established a body 
corporate to be known as the 'African Development Foundation,'" which 
"shall be subject to the provisions of chapter 91 of title 31 
applicable to wholly owned Government Corporations." 22 U.S.C. §§ 290h- 
1, 290h-6. Similarly, see the statute establishing the Presidio Trust 
as a non-GCCA corporation: "There is established a wholly owned 
government corporation to be known as the Presidio Trust," which "shall 
be treated as a wholly owned government corporation subject to chapter 
91 of title 31, United States Code." Omnibus Parks and Public Lands 
Management Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-333, div. I, tit. I, § 103, 10 
Stat. 4093, 4098-4101 (Nov. 12, 1996) (reprinted in 16 U.S.C. § 460bb 
note). 

[77] 2 U.S.C. § 622(8). 

[78] See, e.g., GAO, A Glossary of Terms Used in the Federal Budget 
Process, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-734SP], at 59 
(Washington, D.C.: September 2005); Congressional Research Service, 
Government-Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs): An Institutional Overview, 
RS21663 (Sept. 29, 2009). 

[79] 48 C.F.R. § 35.017; see also [hyperlink, 
http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/ffrdc/] (last visited Oct 22, 2009); 
Congressional Research Service, The Quasi Government: Hybrid 
Organizations with Both Government and Private Sector Legal 
Characteristics, RL30533, at 10-12 (Feb. 17, 2009). 

[End of section] 

GAO's Mission: 

The Government Accountability Office, the audit, evaluation and 
investigative arm of Congress, exists to support Congress in meeting 
its constitutional responsibilities and to help improve the performance 
and accountability of the federal government for the American people. 
GAO examines the use of public funds; evaluates federal programs and 
policies; and provides analyses, recommendations, and other assistance 
to help Congress make informed oversight, policy, and funding 
decisions. GAO's commitment to good government is reflected in its core 
values of accountability, integrity, and reliability. 

Obtaining Copies of GAO Reports and Testimony: 

The fastest and easiest way to obtain copies of GAO documents at no 
cost is through GAO's Web site [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. Each 
weekday, GAO posts newly released reports, testimony, and 
correspondence on its Web site. To have GAO e-mail you a list of newly 
posted products every afternoon, go to [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov] 
and select "E-mail Updates." 

Order by Phone: 

The price of each GAO publication reflects GAO’s actual cost of
production and distribution and depends on the number of pages in the
publication and whether the publication is printed in color or black and
white. Pricing and ordering information is posted on GAO’s Web site, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/ordering.htm]. 

Place orders by calling (202) 512-6000, toll free (866) 801-7077, or
TDD (202) 512-2537. 

Orders may be paid for using American Express, Discover Card,
MasterCard, Visa, check, or money order. Call for additional 
information. 

To Report Fraud, Waste, and Abuse in Federal Programs: 

Contact: 

Web site: [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/fraudnet/fraudnet.htm]: 
E-mail: fraudnet@gao.gov: 
Automated answering system: (800) 424-5454 or (202) 512-7470: 

Congressional Relations: 

Ralph Dawn, Managing Director, dawnr@gao.gov: 
(202) 512-4400: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street NW, Room 7125: 
Washington, D.C. 20548: 

Public Affairs: 

Chuck Young, Managing Director, youngc1@gao.gov: 
(202) 512-4800: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street NW, Room 7149: 
Washington, D.C. 20548: