"Through the federal budget process, the George W. Bush administration and Congress made it much easier for the CIA and other agencies involved in counterterrorism to hire more contractors than civil servants. They did this to limit the size of the permanent workforce, to hire employees more quickly than the sluggish federal process allows and because they thought - wrongly, it turned out -that contractors would be less expensive."
The Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) largely debunked this myth in its July 19 briefing paper, which states:
"It is true that core contract personnel are, on average, more expensive than their government counterparts. However, in some cases, contractor personnel are less costly, especially if the work is short-term in nature, easily available commercially, or requires unique expertise for immediate needs."
Fair enough. But even ODNI’s statement ignores the fact that no apples-to-apples comparison of contractor and federal employee costs has been conducted. Not for intelligence work. And not for other government work.