Deloitte Gets DOGE’d Harder Than Anyone

Deloitte office exterior sign

We’ve been saying for weeks now that Deloitte is going to get especially screwed by President Trump’s hard-on for reducing government spending and some people have mistaken this for us having a hard-on for reducing the Green Dot’s revenue. We’re not bullying Deloitte. We’re focusing on them because this is a website that covers Big 4 more than any other topic and of the Big 4, Deloitte is by far the largest federal contractor. Thus, Deloitte will be damaged most by any effort to pull back on the use of outside contractors. And with layoffs inevitably on the way as a direct result of this, the last thing we want to do is bully.

You probably saw the Financial Times story from the other day but just in case, let’s pull a short excerpt from “Deloitte hit hardest by Trump’s clampdown on consultancy spending” for your reading pleasure:

Deloitte is emerging as the biggest early loser from a Trump administration push to axe spending on consultants, ahead of a Monday deadline for the companies to offer price cuts and other concessions.

The Big Four accounting and consulting firm has had at least 129 contracts terminated or slimmed down, according to a Financial Times analysis of data published by Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency (Doge). The figure is more than double that of any other consultancy.

According to FT — because we don’t do math here — the claimed savings of these 129 contracts is more than $371 million. The next contractor on their chart is Booz Allen Hamilton with 60 contracts canceled for a claimed savings of $207 million. Although Deloitte is “winning” in number of contracts, FT says its PwC’s spun off federal practice at Guidehouse that’s losing the most, monetarily speaking, despite it being just a few contracts–$376 million.

It must be really nice to have a data analytics team on staff to analyze that stuff. We have no such luxury so instead we’re doing this.

According to an early DOGE canceled contract dump thrown into a Google sheet (link to sheet here) by a Redditor in February, the total number of Deloitte’s canceled contracts in that batch of data is $572 million across 35 contracts. $572,422,822 to be exact. This requires further analysis, obviously.

So why Deloitte? This person on r/Deloitte has some out there guesses:

Mmm. Yeah, don’t think they care all that much about the overuse of offshoring at the moment. What seems mostly likely to us is that they’re having a harder time justifying each contract. But that’s just our out there guess.

8 thoughts on “Deloitte Gets DOGE’d Harder Than Anyone

  1. Moral of the story: If Trump turns on you, the solution is just to suck up to him (and debase yourself) even harder.

    2
    1
  2. Well, no mercy here. They made way too much money during the lockdown period doing low-level consulting work. Back then, no one was talking about purpose or making an impact that matters. That was the time when big money was being made.

  3. Not on a percentage of business basis, but a very healthy chunk of their Deloitte Consulting revenues [Deloitte Gets DOGE’d Harder Than Anyone] – I suspect that a lot of the purge will be outside of the US, namely India, but India has significant employee friendly protection laws. We will soon see partner/director “voluntary leaves”.

    HOWEVER, this gov’t purge could put Guidehouse out of business. I never heard of Guidehouse before this article.

    From Guidehouse’s web site – it appears that they’re primarily a gov’t contractor similar to Booz Allen Hamilton.

    >>We integrate public and private sector strategies to help federal health agencies achieve their missions efficiently and sustainably. Our work delivers positive outcomes for public health organizations, such as the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, Food and Drug Administration, National Institutes of Health, Military Health System, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, and Veterans Affairs.<<

  4. I don’t believe the carried interest point in the least. The fact that D is the largest advisor to PE isn’t remotely a reason for this.

  5. I worked on one federal project at Deloitte, and we wasted so much time and money I refused to work on a federal engagement ever again (2009ish). I’m talking daily two hour long phone calls with 30+ consultants (I figured out that call was costing the taxpayer $30k a day, to accomplish nothing.) I was also flown to G street and spend day after day in a $400 a night Residence Inn room, so I could sit in a conference room with nobody else from my project, for … reasons? F all that.

  6. At one point in my life, I wanted to work both for the federal government and The Big 4. I guess in some ways, I still do. However, I see it as mostly impossible. I’m just helping people with their TurboTax and old classmates who have their own CPA practice at this point.

Comments are closed.