We Could Cover 10 Percent of the Entire Deficit if Gov’t Stopped Accidentally Making Improper Payments

the text says a Government Accountability Office (GAO) report estimates that about **$186 billion** in **improper payments** were made in fiscal year 2025 across **64 federal programs**, affecting **15 agencies**-an **increase of $24 billion** from the year before. It claims that improper payments make up roughly **10% of the total federal deficit** (citing a deficit of about **$1.8 trillion** the previous year and about **$1.9 trillion** projected for the current year).

The biggest sources of improper payments are listed as **Medicare (~$57B)** and **Medicaid (~$37B)**, followed by the **earned income tax credit (~$21B)** and **SNAP (~$10B)**. The GAO is described as distinguishing **improper payments** (wrong amount or should not have been paid) from **fraud** (willful misrepresentation), noting that improper payments have been an ongoing problem for decades and peaked during **COVID-era spending (2020-2023)**.

The article then discusses a Trump management effort to curb fraud, including placing **Vice President J.D. Vance** in charge of anti-fraud efforts, with claims from administration figures that eliminating improper payments and related fraud or waste could considerably reduce the budget deficit.




A new report by the Government Accountability Office indicates that approximately 10 percent of the federal deficit could be erased just by ending improper payments.

Further, when coupled with a crackdown on outright fraud, the federal deficit could be cut by hundreds of billions more.

The GAO said that in fiscal year 2025, 15 federal agencies made approximately $186 billion in improper payments across 64 programs, an increase of $24 billion from the previous fiscal year.

The federal deficit was $1.8 trillion last year, and is projected to be $1.9 trillion this fiscal year, according to the Congressional Budget Office, so $186 billion represents about 10 percent of that total.

Last year, the biggest offender programs for improper payments were Medicare, coming in at $57 billion, followed by Medicaid at $37 billion, the earned income tax credit at $21 billion, and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) with $10 billion.

“Improper payments have been a government-wide issue for more than 20 years, with estimates since FY 2003 at about $3 trillion,” the GAO added.

The agency contrasted improper payments with fraudulent ones, explaining, “Fraud is obtaining something of value through willful misrepresentation.”

Meanwhile, “Improper payments are payments that should not have been made or that were made in the incorrect amount; typically they are overpayments. While all fraudulent payments are considered improper, not all improper payments are due to fraud.”

Kristen Kociolek, the managing director of GAO’s Financial Management and Assurance team, noted that the worst period for improper payments was during the COVID pandemic from 2020 to 2023, because the new spending programs rolled out at the time meant an increased likelihood of significant amounts of money going to the wrong place, The Washington Times reported.

She added regarding the $24 billion increase in improper payments last year that it is “concerning to see the amounts of improper payments starting to increase again with the federal government not facing these emergency risks.”

President Donald Trump recently placed Vice President J.D. Vance in charge of the administration’s efforts to root out fraud.

During a task force meeting at the White House Tuesday, Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller argued that government programs have been set up based on an honor system.

“They are set up based on the idea that you could trust the average person, through their own morality, to abide by the rules and comply with the law,” he said, arguing that people have taken advantage of that trust to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars.

“I believe, based on what I’ve seen, from what I’ve heard, that we could balance the federal budget if the only dollars that went out of the Treasury went to individuals who were properly, lawfully, correctly eligible to receive them,” Miller concluded.

SpaceEx CEO Elon Musk, who oversaw the Department of Government Efficiency last year, estimated at the time that roughly 20 percent of all federal government spending goes toward fraud and waste, presumably including improper payments.

So Godspeed to Vance’s task force. The future financial stability of the country relies on controlling spending, in large part by rooting out waste and fraud.

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