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The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) announced the cancellation of at least 58 contracts on Wednesday, resulting in more than $150 million in savings for the American taxpayer.
While DOGE claims the overall contract cancellations are projected to save more than $7 billion, independent experts have questioned the accuracy of this figure, suggesting it may be inflated.
A study co-authored by Yale SOM’s Cameron LaPoint shows that the cancellations drove up the cost of commercial ...
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DOGE released data about federal contract savings. It doesn't add up
To check DOGE's claims, NPR compared the unique award ID from each hyperlink DOGE published with a list of more than 130,000 contracts that have been modified since Jan. 20, downloaded from ...
A POLITICO analysis of DOGE data reveals the organization saved less than 5 percent of its claimed savings from nearly 10,100 ...
The contracts listed — which total about $16.5 billion in savings — are just a “subset” of all contract and lease cancellations the agency has overseen so far, with the publicly disclosed ...
Data published on DOGE's "Wall of Receipts" shows that more than one-third of the contract cancellations, 417 in all, are expected to yield no savings.
DOGE says the overall contract cancellations are expected to save $9.6 billion, an amount that has been questioned as inflated by independent experts.
Data published on DOGE’s “Wall of Receipts” shows that more than one-third of the contract cancellations, 794 in all, are expected to yield no savings.
A new government tracker claims DOGE has saved billions from ending federal contracts. But an NPR analysis of the data finds the claimed savings don't add up.
A new government tracker claims DOGE has saved billions from ending federal contracts. But an NPR analysis of the data finds the claimed savings don't add up.
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