
Acquisitions, contracts, procurement 2
2000
1. Acquisitions, Government Spending. We define and categorize these topics as generalized expenditures that include all government consumption, investment, and transfer payments.
In national income accounting, the government's acquisition of goods and services for current use to directly satisfy the individual or collective needs of the community is classed as government final consumption expenditure. On the other hand, government acquisition of goods and services intended to create future benefits, such as infrastructure investment or research spending, is classed as government investment (government gross capital formation). These two types of government spending, on final consumption and gross capital formation, constitute one of the major components of gross domestic product.
Government spending can be financed by government borrowing, taxes, custom duties, the sale or lease of natural resources, and various fees like national park entry fees or licensing fees. When Governments choose to borrow money, they have to pay interest on the money borrowed. Therefore, government spending changes are a significant fiscal policy component to stabilize the macroeconomic business cycle.
2. Contracts and Procurement. These are defined as spending on goods and services for current use to satisfy the individual or collective needs of the community members directly. This is called government final consumption expenditure (GFCE.) It is a purchase from the national accounts use of income account for goods and services directly satisfying individual needs (individual consumption) or collective needs of community members (collective consumption). GFCE consists of the value of the goods and services produced by the government itself other than own-account capital formation and sales and purchases by the government of goods and services produced by market producers that are supplied to households—without any transformation—as social transfers in kind.
3. Primary categories of Acquisitions, Contracts, and Procurements. Government spending or expenditures can be divided into three primary groups: 1. Government consumption; 2. Transfer payments; and 3. Interest payments.
Government consumption. This is commonly defined as the acquisition, contracting, and procurement or the purchase of goods and services for the specific needs and uses of the government, its representatives, and supporting departments, agencies, or organizations.
Examples include road and infrastructure repairs, national defense, schools, healthcare, and government workers' salaries. Investments in sciences and strategic technological innovations to serve the public needs.
Transfer payments. These are referred to as government payments to internal government departments, agencies, or organizations. Transfers may also include payments to individuals, private, public, non-governmental organizations, or foreign governments. Internal government payments are made without exchanging goods or services, for example, Old Age Security payments, Employment Insurance benefits, veteran and civil service pensions, foreign aid, and social assistance payments. Subsidies to businesses are also included in this category.
Interest payments. These include the interest paid to the holders of government bonds, such as Saving Bonds and Treasury bills, public and private organizations that have been established and authorized by the government to perform special financial services to the government.