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FROM THE AAE FROM THE ARMY


ACQUISITION EXECUTIVE THE HONORABLE HEIDI SHYU


‘Small’


WINNING EFFORT BG Jeffrey A. Gabbert, MICC com- manding general, talks with MICC small business specialists from across the country during a roundtable workshop in June 2015 at Joint Base San Antonio – Fort Sam Houston, TX. In FY15, for the first time since the command was established in 2009, MICC met all five of its small busi- ness socioeconomic goals. In all, the command executed more than 36,000 contract actions valued at $5.2 billion in FY15 in support of Soldiers and their families, with approximately $2.25 billion of that awarded to American small businesses, including four specific socioeconomic categories. (Photo by Daniel P. Elkins, MICC Public Affairs)


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has BIG MEANING


Small businesses are no small part of the Army’s acquisition mission


S


mall businesses are critically important to all of us as consumers, Americans and members of the Army profession. According to the U.S. Small Business Administration, small business makes


up roughly two-thirds of all new private-sector jobs and nearly half of the American workforce.


Te U.S. government is the world’s largest single buyer of goods and services, spending roughly $500 billion on contracts annually. Federal executive agencies established a series of statutory guidelines that set a number of goals for small business procurement, notably that at least 23 percent of federal contract dollars must be awarded to small businesses. DOD is responsible for a considerable portion of small business contracts, with the Army con- sistently awarding the most contract dollars.


In FY15, the Army awarded over $17.5 billion in con- tracts to small businesses. Tat constituted 31.6 percent of the total procurement dollars. Te Army exceeded its


ASC.ARMY.MIL 7


FROM THE AAE


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