Although it was developed in the US for defence applications, and is most actively applied there, PBC strategies are growing in popularity around the world and in industry sectors other than defence. In particular, PBC frameworks are becoming popular in shipping, transport, health services and the energy sector.
Defence United States
federal law defines performance-based acquisition and treats it as "the preferred method for acquiring services". The
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2001 established an order of precedence for: • performance-based contracting with
firm fixed prices • other forms of performance-based contracting • non-performance based contracting. PBC is widely applied in the Australian defence sector, primarily by the major acquisition and support organisation, the former
Defence Materiel Organisation (DMO). It is particularly useful in the defence environment because of the inherent complexity and large scale of the projects. Recently, Australian Defence has initiated an escalation of the use of PBCs with the strategic aims of improving capability outcomes and reducing total cost of ownership. In Australia and the US, PBC frameworks are most commonly applied in a defence context. In October 2000, US Congress approved an incentive for the use of performance-based contracts, through legislation giving the
Department of Defense time-limited authority to treat certain performance-based service contracts as contracts for
commercial items, which may be awarded using streamlined procedures under Part 12 of the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR). PBC frameworks are currently being used in numerous defence-related projects, including: •
BAE Systems Hawk •
Boeing Defense, Space & Security •
Eurofighter Typhoon •
Anzac class frigates •
Royal Australian Armoured Corps vehicles •
Collins class submarines •
GE Aviation •
Lockheed Martin:
F-35 Lightning II maintenance contracts "pave the way for a longer-term, Performance Based Logistics agreement for the F-35 program".
Industry PBC is becoming more popular in a broader range of private and
public sector organisations as they seek to reduce costs and create a closer link between expenditure and performance goals. Areas in industry where PBC is applied include: • Commercial shipping • Public transport • Health services • Energy generation •
Maintenance, repair and overhaul • Commercial airlines • Manufacturing •
IT and
business process outsourcing (BPO) •
Facilities management • Road maintenance, for example in
Western Australia and
New South Wales. In both instances, very positive outcomes are recorded. Another case study related to Performance Based Contracting in Road Maintenance claims that in 2005, 35 countries were employing PBC for Road Maintenance, and in 2006 15 others had implemented a PBC or were investigating its use.
Domestic policy There are many cases of
Payment by Results (PbR) models being used to achieve domestic policy goals, in particular the delivery of social or community services, with payments linked to the results a provider achieves, rather than its inputs and processes. The use of PbR models is often promoted as a way to drive service improvements and achieve increased value for money by aligning incentives to desired outcomes. In practice, a diverse range of PbR models have been implemented by governments, varying by the degree to which payments can be based on the achievement of pure outcomes, and risk can be transferred away from government and towards providers. The purest form of PbR is
payment by outcomes, which seeks to maximise payments linked to outcomes. This is where the commissioner (central or local government) is fully able to contract in terms of the outcomes it wants and to transfer the
financial risk of non-delivery to providers. The
Conservative Party in the UK, in its
2010 general election manifesto, proposed to introduce "simple results-based contracts drawn up with central government and its agencies", which would allow former public sector staff to operate their own public services.
International development Performance-based contracting is used in
international development as part of
output-based aid approaches. In this context, the approach is often referred to as
results-based aid (where the funding relationship is between a donor and a recipient country) or
results-based financing (where the funding relationship is between a developing country government or a
development agency, and public or private sector providers). == References ==