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Boston Herald
Boston Herald
22 Apr 2025
Richard Stern and Katherine Miller/ The Heritage Foundation


NextImg:Stern & Miller: The high cost of big government

$521 billion. That’s the estimate the federal government itself put forward of annual fraud levels. That’s enough money to rebuild every crumbling bridge and school in the country — all squandered due to government incompetence.

In fiscal year 2024, just 16 agencies reported improper payment estimates that totaled $162 billion — money lost to error, fraud, overpayments, or ineligible claims. That’s part of a staggering $2.8 trillion lost since 2003.

This isn’t a mere accounting error; it’s a heist on taxpayers, stealing cash that could’ve stayed in your wallet.

Nearly 75% of these losses come from five programs: Medicare, Medicaid, the Earned Income Tax Credit, SNAP, and the Restaurant Revitalization Fund. For these programs, error rates amount roughly to 45%.

Unemployment insurance (UI) is another major culprit, with its controls collapsing during COVID-19 and fueling fraud through identity theft.

All told, that’s billions that could lower health care costs, stabilize Social Security, or shrink the deficit.

Worse, many federal agencies don’t follow basic accountability laws. In 2023, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) flagged 11 major agencies — including the Department of Defense (DOD), Health and Human Services, and Treasury — for breaking payment integrity laws.
The DOD exemplifies these problems. Despite its massive budget, it’s never passed a clean audit, and its outdated systems and lax fraud controls leave taxpayers footing the bill for untold losses.

Other government agencies skip reporting losses entirely or ignore fraud-reduction crackdowns.

The national debt has soared past $35 trillion, with $2 trillion annual deficits piling up. Every wasted dollar adds to a taxpayer burden that’s now over $270,000 per household.

The GAO’s proposed fixes — stricter reporting, blocking ineligible payments, extending fraud investigations — are a start. But they don’t touch the root problem: Washington’s reckless expansion of government programs. When these programs grow too big, fraud and mismanagement become inevitable.

Some argue cuts harm the needy. But the real damage is the waste, which lets scammers siphon off billions that should reach veterans and retirees. More money won’t solve this problem; accountability will.
Congress must eliminate improper payments, not adjust them.
Agencies squandering taxpayer dollars should face budget cuts and leadership overhaul. Fraud prevention systems should be upgraded to require real-time ID checks (capable of stopping $60 billion in UI fraud outright) and eligibility verification prior to fund dispersal; all funding should be linked to performance.

The government isn’t underfunded — it’s wastefully stolen too much of what we have all worked hard to produce. Americans deserve a system that protects their hard-earned money, not one that squanders it.

Richard Stern is Acting Director of the Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at the Heritage Foundation and Director of its Grover M. Hermann Center for the Federal Budget. Katherine Miller is a former member of Heritage’s Young Leaders Program/Tribune News Service