- Boring Business Nerd
- Posts
- Will Musk Cut Consulting’s Government Cash?
Will Musk Cut Consulting’s Government Cash?
Musk, his allies, and consultants come from very different worlds.
TODAY’S STORY

The U.S. government spends $18B annually on consulting contracts, with Booz Allen Hamilton securing roughly half of that total.
Consulting firms have a long-standing tradition of profiting from government contracts.
In 1977, Booz Allen Hamilton received $320,000 (equivalent to $1.7 million today) from the Department of Agriculture to determine how many chickens inspectors should examine per minute.
Since 2019, Accenture has received $700 million from the Department of Education to develop and manage a website and mobile app for student aid.
Since 2022, BCG has earned $380 million from the Defense Health Agency through its Workforce 3.0 initiative, which supports medical care for the armed forces.
But with Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) aiming to slash government spending by $2T, some have raised concerns that Booz Allen Hamilton, Accenture, and their competitors might be on the chopping block.
The concern appears legitimate. Musk, his allies, and consultants come from very different worlds. In 2020, Elon Musk famously criticized the overabundance of M.B.A.s, claiming they "are polluting companies' ability to think creatively and give customers what they really want." Consulting is still a top destination for business graduates, with about one-third of M.B.A.s from top schools entering the field. Peter Thiel, co-founder of Palantir and a longtime friend of Musk, has gone even further, calling McKinsey and traditional consulting a “total racket…it’s just all fake.”
With DOGE on the hunt, consultants may soon have to learn a new trick.
OUR PICKS
Here are today’s recs to help you live a smarter life…
1. Take your home garden to the next level.
Featuring a ladder design that allows unobstructed sunlight, this plant rack accommodates more than 7 pots, making it an ideal decorative piece for organizing your plant collection. Suitable for both indoor and outdoor use. 41% off for a limited time.*
2. Golf in style.
This men’s tech golf polo features textured fabric that’s soft, light & breathable.*
3. Built for accuracy, designed for your everyday.
The Oura Ring Gen3 Horizon tracks your sleep, activity, stress, heart rate, and more. $50 off for a limited time.*
#SHORTS
McKinsey swaps humans for AI agents
@boringbusinesskieran McKinsey swaps humans for AI agents 🤖 #ai #consulting #mckinsey #accenture #jobs #careeradvice #career
PREVIOUS STORIES
Yahoo is ready to pitch to consumers — Yahoo was all but left for dead, but is now in growth mode under its new ownership.
Apple Pay or We Don’t Pay — 78% of Gen Zers say they’d stop shopping at merchants that don’t accept digital wallets like Apple Pay and Google Wallet.
Hotels see revenue boost from data center boom — The data center boom will generate secondary and tertiary effects across various industries.
U.S. Hotel Projects at All-Time High — The Q4 U.S. hotel pipeline hit 6,378 projects, representing 746,986 rooms.
Robotaxis are everywhere. That could be bad news for Uber. — The expansion of autonomous vehicles (AVs) severely threatens Uber’s business model.
To read the web version of previous stories, click here
If you have any comments or feedback, just respond to this email.
Thanks for reading,
Kieran & Justin Ryan
