565 billion dollars of loss over the 48 years
it not loss
people here tell you it not loss
why you keep saying it loss?
The GAO says it's gone...
The people that lost it claim it's an accounting program problem...
"The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has long been criticized for its inability to manage costs. During the 1990s, faced with flat budgets and ambitious program goals, NASA adopted a management approach of "faster, better, cheaper." But by the decade's end, the approach was blamed for a number of mission failures. Meanwhile, the cost of the International Space Station (ISS) spiraled billions of dollars over budget. Embattled administrator Daniel Goldin resigned in 2001 after nearly 10 years on the job, and NASA named Sean O'Keefe, a self-described "bean counter," as Goldin's replacement."
"Two weeks later, troubling new doubts were raised about NASA's financial management. PricewaterhouseCoopers, the agency's auditor, issued a disclaimed opinion on NASA's 2003 financial statements. PwC complained that NASA couldn't adequately document more than $565 billion ? billion ? in year-end adjustments to the financial-statement accounts, which NASA delivered to the auditors two months late. Because of "the lack of a sufficient audit trail to support that its financial statements are presented fairly," concluded the auditors, "it was not possible to complete further audit procedures on NASA's September 30, 2003, financial statements within the reporting deadline established by [the Office of Management and Budget]." "
"Financial Lowlights
PwC's audit found numerous basic reporting errors in the year-end and third-quarter financial statements that had nothing to do with the conversion, and which auditors said finance executives should have caught before filing the statements.For example, in the June 2003 quarterly statement, auditors found a $204 million line item called "Other" that "could not be explained or supported, indicating that NASA had not correctly reconciled its budgetary resources to its net cost of operations." PwC also found a $200 million discrepancy between identical line items on two different financial statements. In the year-end audit, PwC discovered that NASA's stated fund balance was actually $2 billion more than the balance in its Treasury account."
"The agency also changed the method used to depreciate assets without disclosing that it had done so and explaining why, as is required by government financial-reporting regulations. And it continued to use an incorrect method to account for costs incurred, despite repeated warnings from the General Accounting Office (GAO) and PwC that the method did not even comply with NASA's own financial-management manual. "
The entire article, from CEO magazine, is filled with evidence that NASA shouldn't be allowed to control a dime let alone a budget of billions of dollars.
And yet, they continue to get money from the government, despite financial errors every year.