Rethinking Government Operations: Unifying Efficiency and Integrity
To many in the American public, the federal government is synonymous with inefficiency, waste, and abuse. But this perception is not an immutable fact—it’s a solvable problem. The tools and knowledge to fix these issues exist, but to modernize government, we must challenge outdated assumptions about how agencies operate and manage risk.
One of the most persistent myths inside government operations is the idea that speed and program integrity are inherently at odds. This false tradeoff has shaped the way agencies approach their core functions for decades. Agencies tasked with distributing benefits, grants, and payments—programs that often involve billions of taxpayer dollars—have long prioritized speed of service above all else. The result? A system that tacitly accepts fraud, waste, and abuse as the cost of doing business. But it doesn’t have to be this way. By rethinking how risk management and operations work together, we can create a government that is faster, more efficient, and far more trustworthy. If DOGE leadership chooses the path of re-engineering government to serve the public better, faster, and cheaper, it has a unique opportunity at this moment to drive true change.
The Problem: Silos and Misdirected Priorities
A key obstacle to improving government efficiency is the artificial separation of operations from program integrity, with competing objectives. Operations teams typically focus on throughput—getting benefits and payments out the door as quickly as possible. Meanwhile, risk and program integrity teams are tasked with identifying and mitigating risks, which is often perceived as slowing down processes. This creates a fundamental misalignment within agencies, where risk management is seen as a hurdle to efficiency rather than a partner in delivering better outcomes.
This disconnect is especially apparent in agencies that execute programs with distributed processing models. For example, the Social Security Administration (SSA) processes disability and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) claims through a network of state-level agencies. This decentralized approach makes it difficult to establish consistent controls across the system, leaving fraud and improper payments as persistent risks. Speed of service often takes precedence, while program integrity is relegated to a secondary concern—if it’s addressed at all.
Fraud risk assessments, which are supposed to identify and mitigate risks, are often conducted in isolation from operations. They may highlight vulnerabilities, but they lack the authority or integration needed to address the root causes of fraud, waste, and abuse. Risk management is effectively sidelined, while the operational decisions driving money flows continue unchecked. This fragmented approach is not just inefficient—it’s unsustainable.
The False Choice Between Throughput and Integrity
The idea that agencies must choose between speed and program integrity is a false dichotomy. With the right tools and strategies, it’s possible to achieve both. The private sector has shown us how. Banks and financial institutions, for example, process millions of transactions daily while maintaining robust fraud detection systems. They’ve proven that speed and security are not mutually exclusive. Government agencies can—and should—follow suit.
The challenge is not a lack of technology or expertise. It’s a failure to integrate fraud risk management into the core of government operations.
When risk management is treated as an afterthought, agencies miss opportunities to proactively prevent fraud and waste. Instead of waiting to address problems after they occur, agencies need to embed fraud detection and prevention mechanisms directly into their operational workflows. This requires a shift in mindset, where risk management is seen as a critical enabler of efficiency rather than a roadblock.
The Opportunity: Modernizing Processes, Not Just Technology
When people talk about government modernization, the conversation often revolves around technology. While new tools like artificial intelligence (AI) and advanced analytics are important, they are not a silver bullet. Technology alone cannot fix broken processes. Without thoughtful process redesign, modernization efforts risk becoming expensive failures that amplify existing inefficiencies.
Agentic AI systems have the potential to revolutionize fraud detection and program integrity. These systems can analyze massive datasets in real time, identifying patterns and anomalies that would take human analysts weeks or months to detect. They can also automate manual, time-consuming portions of processes such as claim development and investigative steps. But AI is only as effective as the processes it supports at scale. If an agency’s workflow is disjointed or outdated, even the most advanced AI tools will fail to deliver meaningful results.
DOGE’s Role: Leading the Charge for Change
The U.S. Department of Government Efficiency Service (DOGE) is uniquely positioned to drive meaningful change across federal agencies. Its mission goes beyond technology upgrades—it’s about rethinking how government operates at every level. DOGE has the opportunity to help agencies break down silos, align their priorities, and adopt a unified approach to operations and risk management.
This is no small task. It will require more than superficial reforms or incremental changes. True modernization demands a fundamental shift in how agencies view their mission and their responsibilities. DOGE can lead this effort by promoting enterprise-wide process improvement, fostering collaboration between operations and risk management, and championing the use of cutting-edge technologies to support these efforts.
The Stakes: A More Trustworthy Government
The potential benefits of this transformation are enormous. By integrating risk management into operations and leveraging modern technologies, government agencies can dramatically reduce fraud, waste, and abuse. They can deliver faster, more reliable services to the American people. And perhaps most importantly, they can begin to rebuild the public’s trust.
But the risks of inaction are just as significant. If we continue to treat risk management as a siloed function, fraud and waste will remain persistent issues. If we focus on technology without addressing process inefficiencies, modernization efforts will fall short. And if we fail to act altogether, the public’s trust in government will continue to erode.
This is a pivotal moment for the federal government. The tools to create a better, more efficient system are within our reach, but we must act with urgency and purpose. DOGE has the mandate and the opportunity to lead this effort, but success will require a shared commitment across agencies, political leaders, and the public.
A government that works better, faster, and with greater integrity is not an impossible dream. It’s an achievable goal. But it will take bold action and a clear vision to get there. The American people deserve a government they can trust—one that delivers results without waste and inefficiency. The time to make that vision a reality is now.
Let’s get to work.
Photo by Joshua Sukoff on Unsplash. Article first posted on GovIntegrity.