Special Report
These Federal Agencies Are Wasting the Most Taxpayer Money
Published:
The U.S. national debt has long been a point of contention in American politics, and recently, it has taken on a renewed urgency on Capitol Hill. Decades of deficit spending has pushed the national debt to $34.6 trillion, double what it was only 10 years ago. Interest payments on the national debt are projected to top $870 billion in fiscal 2024 alone, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
For some lawmakers, balancing the federal budget and reducing the national debt is a top priority. Proposed austerity measures include cuts to a wide range of federal programs such as air traffic control, food safety inspections, housing assistance, scientific research, as well as Medicare and Social Security. (Here is a look at the institutions Americans have lost the most faith in.)
Of course, these programs benefit millions of Americans, and their downsizing or elimination would have far reaching consequences. But cracking down on waste, fraud, and abuse in federally funded programs would be a far more politically palatable alternative to reducing deficit spending.
In its annual improper payments report, the Office of Management and Budget found that federal agencies wasted nearly $785 billion on overpayments in the last five years. Simply making accurate payments could have saved taxpayers over $175 billion in fiscal 2023 alone.
Using data from the OMB, 24/7 Wall St. identified the government agencies wasting the most taxpayer money. The 13 federal agencies on this list are ranked by the dollar value of overpayments made in the government’s 2023 fiscal year. All supplemental data in this story also came from the OMB report. Among these agencies, overpayments range from about $16 million to nearly $99 billion.
While some of this money is recoverable, taxpayers are ultimately on the hook for much of that wasted spending. The agencies on this list recovered a reported $25.2 billion in improperly made payments in fiscal 2023, some share of which was paid in error in a previous year. Still, this amounts to only about 14% of the total overpayments made in 2023. (These are the companies that receive the most in government subsidies.)
Notably, government agencies themselves are not always directly responsible for overpayments. In seven of the 13 agencies on this list, 50% or more of the total value of overpayments in the last fiscal year were determined to have been outside of agency control. A small share of these cases are attributable to fraud.
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