PlainSpending

International Trade Commission

15 DOGE terminations · $670.5K claimed savings · 0.0% of total DOGE cuts

Total Claimed Savings

$670.5K

Total Contract Value

$1.7M

Contract Terminations

15

$670.5K

Grant Terminations

0

$0

The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has recorded 15 terminations at International Trade Commission, claiming $670.5K in savings against $1.7M in underlying contract and grant value. That total accounts for 0.0% of all DOGE cuts reported to date and makes International Trade Commission one of the specific agencies where DOGE's wind-down of existing federal obligations is concretely visible in the data.

The breakdown between procurement and financial assistance is informative: 15 contract terminations delivered $670.5K (100.0%), while 0 grant terminations delivered $0 (0.0%). A contract-heavy profile points to agencies whose main DOGE exposure is vendor and service-provider relationships, while a grant-heavy profile signals agencies whose cuts flow through universities, nonprofits, research institutions, and state and local government recipients — two categories with sharply different downstream consequences.

Concentration matters: the top vendor/recipient — Financial Times, Ltd. — accounts for $186.9K of the terminations at International Trade Commission, followed by The Windsor Group at $138.8K. A concentrated list tends to mean a handful of large canceled awards drive the headline number, while a long tail signals broad-based program pullback. Readers should treat DOGE's claimed savings as self-reported and unverified until reconciled against FPDS and USASpending.gov award-level data, which this page links to for every termination.

How much trust these figures deserve depends on knowing where they come from. The savings totals on this page are reported by the Department of Government Efficiency at doge.gov and reflect its own accounting of contracts and grants it says were canceled. They are self-reported and have not been independently audited, so the headline savings can differ from the verifiable value of the underlying awards. Each termination here can be traced back to the Federal Procurement Data System and to USASpending.gov, the spending-transparency system the U.S. Treasury has run since the DATA Act of 2014, where the original contract or grant value is recorded. Reconciling the claimed savings against those official records is the only way to separate genuine reductions from awards that were already winding down or were partly obligated. For scale, federal outlays exceeded 6,750 billion dollars in fiscal year 2024, so even a large agency total represents a small slice of overall federal spending. Our methodology explains how we group terminations by agency and when the DOGE dataset was retrieved.

Savings Breakdown

Contract Savings $670.5K (100.0%)

Top Vendors & Recipients by Savings

Vendor / Recipient Claimed Savings
Financial Times, Ltd. $186.9K
The Windsor Group $138.8K
Economist Intelligence Unit $69.2K
Marinos E. Tsigas $57.8K
Rising Edge Analytics $54.4K
James Harrigan $54.0K
National Newspapers (NNA, Inc.) $50.0K
Robert Feenstra $42.0K
Shaw, Bransford, & Roth $10.8K
Politico, LLC $6.6K

All Terminations (15)

Vendor / Recipient Type Savings Contract Value Date
Financial Times, Ltd.
Enterprise License plus 3 print copies
FPDS →
Contract $186.9K $228.7K Feb 20, 2025
The Windsor Group
Temporary Personnel, Attorney, FOIA and Privacy Act
FPDS →
Contract $138.8K $138.8K Feb 18, 2025
Economist Intelligence Unit
Enterprise Subscription to Economist Intelligence Unit
FPDS →
Contract $69.2K $418.9K Feb 20, 2025
Marinos E. Tsigas
Advisory services on computable general equilibrium modeling focusing on labor & non-tariff measures…
FPDS →
Contract $57.8K $90.0K Feb 18, 2025
Rising Edge Analytics
Expert consulting services for Investigation No. 337-TA-1391
FPDS →
Contract $54.4K $60.1K Feb 18, 2025
James Harrigan
Specialized economic research development & evaluation of Commission models, databases, & applicatio…
FPDS →
Contract $54.0K $60.0K Feb 18, 2025
National Newspapers (NNA, Inc.)
Subscription: Newspaper delivery services.
FPDS →
Contract $50.0K $66.9K Feb 20, 2025
Robert Feenstra
Consulting services, model the impact of trade policy.
FPDS →
Contract $42.0K $42.0K Feb 18, 2025
Shaw, Bransford, & Roth
Legal advice and legal defense services
FPDS →
Contract $10.5K $25.0K Feb 18, 2025
Politico, LLC
Subscription: Politico Pro (3 seats) and E&E Newspapers (5 seats)
FPDS →
Contract $6.6K $13.1K Feb 20, 2025
Shaw, Bransford, & Roth
Legal defense services
FPDS →
Contract $303.24 $30.0K Feb 18, 2025
CQ Roll Call,Inc.
Subscription to CQ Insights and Analysis; Up to 5 seats.
FPDS →
Contract $0 $118.0K Feb 20, 2025
Financial Times, Ltd.
Subscription, FDI Intelligence Database, Two Users
FPDS →
Contract $0 $32.0K Feb 20, 2025
The Windsor Group
Temporary Personnel: Paralegal
FPDS →
Contract $0 $330.0K Feb 18, 2025
Yoto Yotov
Advisory services for the development of Gravity Model.
FPDS →
Contract $0 $40.0K Feb 18, 2025

Agencies With Similar DOGE Impact

Other agencies whose DOGE-claimed savings are closest to International Trade Commission's $670.5K.

Compare federal spending side-by-side →

Note: Savings figures are reported by DOGE.gov and have not been independently verified against USASpending.gov FPDS records. Data sourced from DOGE.gov.
Data Source: DOGE.gov Savings API. Cross-referenced with USASpending.gov (U.S. Treasury) and OMB agency budget classifications. Dataset retrieved March 2025.