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Tenth
Anniversary 1986 FCA Amendments
An
Assessment of Economic Impact
September 1996
TAF
recently commissioned a study to analyze the
economic impact of the 1986 Amendments to the
False Claims Act over the past decade and into
the future. The research and analysis was
conducted by William L. Stringer, Senior Lecturer
in Economics and Finance, Fels Center of
Government at the University of Pennsylvania. Mr.
Stringer is also President of The Kalorama
Consulting Group, Inc., a public policy research
firm headquartered in Washington, D.C., and
formerly served as Chief Economist for the U.S.
Senate Budget Committee. Printed below is the
study's executive summary.
Executive
Summary
This
paper examines the economic impact of the 1986
Amendments to the False Claims Act. The impacts
examined are: (1) the additional cost savings by
the US Government both currently and in the
future, and (2) the deterrent effect of the Act's
Amendments. To structure some insight into
magnitudes of cost savings and deterrence
resulting from the 1986 Amendments, the following
are developed and analyzed: (1) an estimate of
total fraud perpetrated against the US
Government; (2) data relating to the number and
amount of recoveries under the Act; (3) a theory
for identifying the components of deterrence; and
(4) a simulation of deterrence using a variety of
plausible assumptions.
Among
the conclusions reached in this paper are:
1.
Total fraud recoveries since the 1986 Amendments
can be expected to exceed $24 billion by FY 2006,
with $21 billion of that amount coming in the
next decade.
2.
Qui tam recoveries are expected to equal between
about $6.9 billion and $9.3 billion over the next
ten years.
3.
Deterrence of fraud due to the 1986 Amendments
for their first ten years of existence
(1986-1996) is estimated as between $147.9
billion and $295.8 billion, and for their second
ten years of existence (1996-2006) is estimated
as between $240.2 billion (23% of the fraud
projected to be committed over that period) and
$480.3 billion (46% of the fraud projected to be
committed over that period), even assuming a
conservative estimate of deterrent effect.
4.
Deterrence of fraud due to the qui tam
provisions of the amended Act for their first ten
years of existence (1986-1996) is estimated as
between $35.6 billion and $71.3 billion, and for
their second ten years of existence (1996-2006)
is estimated as between $105.1 billion and $210.1
billion, even assuming a conservative estimate of
deterrent effect.
Copies
of the complete study are available from TAF.
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