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55 Procurement Law. 1 (2020)

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                                                                                       SECTION OF PUBLIC CONTRACT LAW
                                                                                           AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION
AMERICANBARASSOCIATION                                                                          VOLUME 55, NUMBER 1
Public Contract Law Section                                                                            WINTER 2020



Cost or Pricing Data Requirements: Emerging

Developments and Risk Areas

By ALEXANDER   O.  CANIZARES


                           One  of the recurring chal-
                           lenges facing companies
                           that do business with the
                           government  is having to
                           turn over cost or pricing
                           data to the government
                           during contract negotia-
                           tions. Under the Truthful
                           Cost or Pricing Data Act,
                           commonly   referred to by its
                           former name,  the Truth in
                           Negotiations Act or TINA,
the government  may, in certain circumstances, obtain
certified (or uncertified) cost or pricing data from con-
tractors as a means of verifying that prices are reason-
able. Enacted in 1962 in response to reports of wide-
spread overcharging by defense contractors, TINA was
intended to protect the taxpayer by giving contracting
officers more information when negotiating prices with
offerors. But cost or pricing data submissions may result
in administrative burdens and delays in the acquisition
system that can frustrate other policy goals.
   This article focuses on four recent developments that
bear upon the scope of cost or pricing data requirements
and their impact on contractors:

    The  increase in the TINA threshold from
      $750,000 to $2 million, which significantly nar-
      rows the scope of contracts subject to the statute;
    The  Section 809 Panel's findings that the


Alexander O. Canizares, a senior counsel with Perkins Coie LLP,
Washington, D.C., is an editorial board member of The Procurement
Lawyer and a vice-chair of the Section's Contract Claims and Disputes
Resolution Committee. Views and opinions expressed in this article are
the author's only.


      Department  of Defense (DoD) overuses cost or
      pricing data and should change its practices to at-
      tract commercial companies to the federal market
      and help streamline the procurement process;
     A February 2019 DoD  Inspector General (IG) re-
     port and DoD  policy changes addressing prices
     charged  by sole-source contractors; and
     Provisions in the FY 2020 National Defense Au-
      thorization Act (NDAA)  that would amend
      TINA  to incentivize companies to comply with re-
      quests for other than certified cost or pricing data,
      among other changes.

TINA  and Certifed Cast or Pricing Data Requirements
TINA   was enacted in 1962 in Public Law 87-653 in re-
sponse to General Accounting  Office (GAO)' findings
of extensive overpricing by federal contractors.2 In 1959,
after audits of DoD negotiated contracts, GAO reported
to Congress that some contractors overcharged the de-
partment and obtained unwarranted  profits.3 Prompted
by GAO's  findings, in 1959, DoD revised its price nego-
tiation policies and procedures in the Armed Services
                                   continued on page 20


Published in The Procurement Lawyer, Volume 55, Number 1, Winter 2020. © 2020 by the American Bar Association. Reproduced with permission. All rights reserved. This information or any portion thereof
may not be copied or disseminated in any form or by any means or stored in an electronic database or retrieval system without the express written consent of the American Bar Association.

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