Federal Analysis
Congress Seeks Federal Fraud Reduction Measures
March 19, 2026
Federal lawmakers and oversight bodies are intensifying efforts to combat the escalating issue of fraud and improper payments in federal programs, which cost approximately $186 billion in 2025 and contribute to the national debt nearing $39 trillion. Congressional leaders, including Rep. Jodey Arrington, emphasize the need for stricter accountability on state-administered programs through "skin-in-the-game" requirements and the adoption of private sector verification technologies. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) highlights that legacy fraud prevention tools are inadequate against sophisticated, networked fraud schemes, urging federal agencies to modernize their fraud detection capabilities and enhance collaboration with private sector entities.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals should anticipate increased demand for advanced fraud detection and verification technologies as agencies seek to modernize anti-fraud frameworks.
- Agencies may prioritize contracts that enable real-time data sharing, AI-enhanced analytics, and flexible fraud prevention solutions to address evolving threats.
- Vendors specializing in identity verification, fraud analytics, and secure data integration stand to benefit from expanded federal procurement opportunities.
- Organizations involved in state-administered federal programs should prepare for heightened compliance and accountability requirements tied to fraud reduction initiatives.
With $39 trillion in debt and deficits growing as far as the eye can see, the federal government is barreling towards a fiscal crisis. Weeding out waste, fraud and abuse is the first place to start in changing that trajectory and restoring public trust in both federal and state governments.
— Rep. Jodey Arrington
Had such technology and verification been the norm, taxpayers would not have lost up to $319 billion of improper pandemic unemployment benefits.
— Rachel Greszler
Fraudsters are operating at internet speed with sophisticated supply chains, AI-enhanced tools and real-time sharing of intelligence about our defenses.
— Dr. David Maimon
Agencies
United States Congress, Government Accountability Office, Department of Justice, Department of Housing and Urban Development, Department of the Treasury
Vendors
SentiLink
Locations
Sources
- Fraud in federal programs threatens national debt · The Hill · Mar 12
- Beyond frameworks: What GAO gets right, and what it misses, about fighting government fraud | Federal News Network · Federal News Network · Mar 19