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Improper Payments' which was released on April 15, 2004.

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Testimony: 

Before the Subcommittee on Government Efficiency and Financial 
Management, Committee on Government Reform, House of Representatives:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 2:30 p.m. EDT Thursday, April 15, 
2004:

Financial Management:

Fiscal Year 2003 Performance and Accountability Reports Provide Limited 
Information on Governmentwide Improper Payments:

Statement of McCoy Williams 
Director, Financial Management and Assurance:

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-631T]:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-04-631T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on 
Government Efficiency and Financial Management, Committee on Government 
Reform, House of Representatives 

Why GAO Did This Study:

The Improper Payments Information Act of 2002 requires that agencies 
annually review all their programs and activities and identify those 
that may be susceptible to significant improper payments. It further 
requires those agencies with improper payments exceeding $10 million to 
provide a report on the actions being taken to reduce those payments.

This testimony updates agency progress in implementing the act based on 
our review of agency fiscal year 2003 Performance and Accountability 
Reports for the 15 agencies and 46 programs previously cited in Office 
of Management and Budget Circular A-11, Section 57. It required those 
agencies and programs to report improper payment information to the 
Office of Management and Budget beginning with their fiscal year 2003 
budget proposals. 

The areas you asked us to address were (1) agencies that reported 
improper payments information and the programs and activities on which 
that information was based, (2) amounts of improper payments reported, 
(3) initiatives agencies reported taking to reduce those payments and 
the results of those initiatives, and (4) impediments to the prevention 
or reduction of improper payments.

What GAO Found:

The fiscal year 2003 Performance and Accountability Reports (PAR) 
typically contained limited amounts of improper payment information 
even for those programs previously cited in Circular A-11 for which a 
reporting requirement has existed for at least three years. The PARs 
contained improper payment estimates for 31 of the 46 programs listed 
in Circular A-11. They contained information on agency initiatives to 
prevent or reduce improper payments for 22 programs and on impediments 
to improper payment prevention or reduction for 11 programs. Seven of 
15 agencies reported on all three categories of information requested 
(improper payment amounts, initiatives taken to reduce or prevent 
improper payments, and impediments to improper payment prevention or 
reduction) for 9 of the 46 programs. For 11 of the 46 programs, the 
four agencies did not report on any of the three elements.

In some cases, agencies reported that they had already determined that 
their programs were not susceptible to significant improper payments. 
However, the auditor’s reports in the same PARs identified management 
challenges or material internal control weaknesses within the programs 
where the design or operation of internal control procedures did not 
reduce, to a relatively low level, the risk that errors, fraud, or 
noncompliance that would be material to the financial statements may 
occur and not be detected promptly by employees in the normal course of 
performing their duties.

Key to the effort of reducing improper payments is the need for a 
strong control environment, including top leadership commitment and 
sustained attention to achieving results. Since 1982, various 
legislative and administrative initiatives have focused on and required 
agency assessments of internal controls over programs and financial 
management activities. Although these initiatives may not specifically 
target improper payments, by emphasizing internal controls, they have 
recognized the importance of internal controls—including a strong 
control environment—in ensuring that federal programs achieve their 
intended results and that federal agencies operate them effectively and 
efficiently.

If diligently and vigorously implemented, the Improper Payments 
Information Act of 2002 should have a significant impact on the 
governmentwide improper payments problem. The level of importance each 
agency, the administration, and the Congress place on the efforts to 
implement the act will determine its overall effectiveness and the 
level to which agencies reduce improper payments and ensure that 
federal funds are used efficiently and for their intended purposes. 

What GAO Recommends:

We are not making any new recommendations in this testimony.

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-631T.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact McCoy Williams at (202) 
512-9508 or williamsm1@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:

I am pleased to be here today to discuss the governmentwide problem of 
improper payments in federal programs and activities. First, I would 
like to respond to your request that we highlight and discuss our 
review of the fiscal year 2003 Performance and Accountability Reports 
(PAR) of 15 agencies and identify, for 46 programs previously cited in 
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A-11, Preparation and 
Submission of Budget Estimates, Section 57, "Information on Erroneous 
Payments,"[Footnote 1] the:

* agencies that reported improper payments information and the programs 
and activities on which that information was based,

* amounts of improper payments reported,

* initiatives agencies reported taking to reduce those payments and the 
results of those initiatives, and:

* impediments to the prevention or reduction of the improper payments.

I will then discuss the importance of effective internal control to the 
success of the Improper Payments Information Act of 2002 (Improper 
Payments Act).[Footnote 2] In this regard, it is important to recognize 
that various legislative and administrative initiatives have called for 
continuing assessments and improvements in internal control and 
financial management systems over the past two decades, at least. 
Meeting the requirements of these initiatives should have resulted in 
agencies having significant information available on their programs and 
activities that are susceptible to improper payments.

Background:

Before highlighting the results of our review of the fiscal year 2003 
PARs, I would like to summarize the requirements of the Improper 
Payments Act. The act requires the head of each agency to annually 
review all programs and activities that the agency administers and 
identify all such programs and activities that may be susceptible to 
significant improper payments. For each program and activity 
identified, the agency is required to estimate the annual amount of 
improper payments and submit those estimates to the Congress before 
March 31 of the following applicable year. The act further requires 
that for any agency program or activity with estimated improper 
payments exceeding $10 million, the head of the agency shall provide a 
report on the actions the agency is taking to reduce those payments.

The Improper Payments Act also required the Director of OMB to 
prescribe guidance to implement its requirements not later than six 
months after the date of its enactment (Nov. 26, 2002). OMB issued this 
guidance on May 21, 2003.[Footnote 3] It states that each agency shall 
report the results of its improper payment efforts in the Management 
Discussion and Analysis section of its PAR for fiscal years ending on 
or after September 30, 2004. In general, the first set of reports 
required by the guidance is due in November 2004. Significantly, the 
guidance issued in May 2003, also required that 15 agencies report 
improper payment information for 46 programs identified in OMB Circular 
A-11, publicly in their fiscal year 2003 PARs. Section 57 required 
agencies to include improper payment[Footnote 4] information for the 
agencies and programs in their nonpublic budget submissions to OMB, 
beginning with the fiscal year 2003 budget proposals. According to OMB, 
the programs were selected primarily because of their large dollar 
volume ($2 billion dollars or more in outlays). In July 2003, OMB 
dropped the requirement for information on erroneous payments and 
eliminated Section 57 requirements for preparing fiscal year 2005 
budget submissions. The information previously called for in the 
circular includes actual and estimated improper payments and rates, 
targets for reducing the improper payment rates identified, and 
corrective action plans to reach the targets.

If diligently and vigorously implemented, the Improper Payments Act 
should have a significant impact on the governmentwide improper 
payments problem. The level of importance each agency, the 
administration, and the Congress place on the efforts to implement the 
act will determine its overall effectiveness and the level to which 
agencies reduce improper payments and ensure that federal funds are 
used for their intended purposes.

Fiscal Year 2003 PARs Contain Limited Improper Payment Information:

As you requested, we reviewed the fiscal year 2003 PARs for the 15 
agencies and 46 programs previously cited in OMB Circular A-11, Section 
57, to identify the improper payment information contained therein. 
Table 1 summarizes the improper payment estimates agencies reported in 
their fiscal year 2003 PARs.:

Table 1: Improper Payment Estimates Reported in Agency Fiscal Year 2003 
PARs:

Agency: 1. Department of Agriculture (USDA); 
Program: 1. Food Stamps; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $1,507,000,000.

Program: 2. Commodity Loan Programs; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $153,000,000.

Program: 3. National School Lunch and Breakfast; 
Reported amount of improper payments: Agency did not report amounts for 
the program.

Program: 4. Women, Infants, and Children; 
Reported amount of improper payments: Agency did not report amounts for 
the program.

Agency: 2. Department of Defense (DOD); 
Program: 5. Military Retirement Fund; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $33,087,000.

Program: 6. Military Health Benefits; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $53,484,000.

Agency: 3. Department of Education (ED); 
Program: 7. Student Financial Assistance--Pell Grants; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $377,500,000;
Student Financial Assistance--non- program specific; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $105,000,000.

Program: 8. Title I; 
Reported amount of improper payments: Agency did not report amounts for 
the program.

Agency: 4. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS); 
Program: 9. Medicaid; 
Reported amount of improper payments: Agency did not report amounts for 
the program.

Program: 10. Medicare; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $11,600,000,000.

Program: 11. Head Start; 
Reported amount of improper payments: Agency did not report amounts for 
the program.

Program: 12. Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF); 
Reported amount of improper payments: Agency did not report amounts for 
the program.

Program: 13. Foster Care--Title IV-E; 
Reported amount of improper payments: Agency did not report amounts for 
the program.

Program: 14. State Children's Insurance Program; 
Reported amount of improper payments: Agency did not report amounts for 
the program.

Program: 15. Child Care and Development Fund; 
Reported amount of improper payments: Agency did not report amounts for 
the program.

Agency: 5. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD); 
Program: 16. Low Income Public Housing; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $650,000,000.

Program: 17. Section 8 Tenant Based; 
Reported amount of improper payments: 1,215,000,000.

Program: 18. Section 8 Project Based; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $662,000,000.

Program: 19. Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) (Entitlement 
Grants, States/Small Cities); 
Reported amount of improper payments: Agency did not report amounts for 
the program.

Agency: 6. Department of Labor (DOL); 
Program: 20. Unemployment Insurance; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $4,225,000,000.

Program: 21. Federal Employees' Compensation Act (FECA); 
Reported amount of improper payments: $Agency: 9,055,000.

Program: 22. Workforce Investment Act; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $3,066,075.

Agency: 7. Department of Treasury (TREAS); 
Program: 23. Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC); 
Reported amount of improper payments: $10,500,000,000.

Agency: 8. Department of Transportation (DOT); 
Program: 24. Airport Improvement Program; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $14,000,000.

Program: 25. Highway Planning and Construction; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $1,400,000.

Program: 26. Federal Transit--Capital Investment Grants; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $32,000,000.

Program: 27. Federal Transit--Formula Grants; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $64,000,000.

Agency: 9. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA); 
Program: 28. Compensation; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $129,063,000.

Program: 29. Dependency and Indemnity Compensation; 
Reported amount of improper payments: Agency did not report amounts for 
the program.

Program: 30. Pension; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $250,535,000.

Program: 31. Insurance Programs; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $261,000.

Agency: 10. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)[A]; 
Program: 32. Clean Water State Revolving Funds; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $.13%; 
Reported as a rate, no amount.

Program: 33. Drinking Water State Revolving Funds; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $.04%; 
Reported as a rate, no amount.

Agency: 11. National Science Foundation (NSF); 
Program: 34. Research and Education Grants and Cooperative Agreements; 
Reported amount of improper payments: Agency did not report amounts for 
the program.

Agency: 12. Office of Personnel Management (OPM); 
Program: 35. Retirement Program (Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) 
and Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS)); 
Reported amount of improper payments: $177,300,000.

Program: 36. Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHB); 
Reported amount of improper payments: $28,200,000.

Program: 37. Federal Employees Group Life Insurance (FEGLI); 
Reported amount of improper payments: $448,000.

Agency: 13. Railroad Retirement Board (RRB); 
Program: 38. Retirement and Survivors Benefits; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $168,327,370.

Program: 39. Railroad Unemployment Insurance Benefits; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $2,778,000.

Agency: 14. Small Business Administration (SBA); 
Program: 40. 7(a) Business Loan Program; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $13,000,000.

Program: 41. 504 Certified Development Companies; 
Reported amount of improper payments: None.

Program: 42. Disaster Assistance; 
Reported amount of improper payments: [B].

Program: 43. Small Business Investment Companies; 
Reported amount of improper payments: [C].

Agency: 15. Social Security Administration (SSA); 
Program: 44. Old Age and Survivors' Insurance; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $600,000,000.

Program: 45. Disability Insurance; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $340,000,000.

Program: 46. Supplemental Security Income (SSI) Program; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $2,740,000,000.

Total; 
Program: 31 of 46 agency programs; reported estimated amounts; 
Reported amount of improper payments: $35,654,504,445. 

Source: Agency fiscal year 2003 Performance and Accountability Reports 
(data); GAO (analysis).

Note: An "o" indicates that the agency did not report amounts for the 
program.

[A] Note that although EPA reported improper payment rates instead of a 
dollar amount, for the purposes of our table and figure, we included 
EPA as having reported improper payment estimates.

[B] SBA reported improper payment rates and amounts for certain 
disaster loans; it did not provide a programwide estimate of improper 
payments.

[C] SBA reported potential improper payment rates and amounts for 
certain small business investment company transactions; it did not 
provide a programwide estimate of improper payments.

[End of table]

Further review of the table shows that the PARs contained improper 
payment estimates for 31 of the 46 agency programs previously listed in 
Circular A-11. The reports contained information on agency initiatives 
to prevent or reduce improper payments for 22 programs and on 
impediments to improper payment prevention or reduction for 11 
programs.

Some agencies partially reported required information. Figure 1 
presents, by agency program, the level of reporting that we found for 
the three categories of information you asked about (improper payment 
amounts; initiatives to prevent improper payments, reduce them, or 
both; and impediments to preventing or reducing them). As you can see, 
the level of reporting is literally all over the board.

Figure 1: Level of Agency Improper Payment Reporting by Program:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Further, although agencies may have met the reporting requirements for 
particular programs by addressing them in PARs, in many cases, the 
information reported was limited to agency plans for future measures 
that may not come about. In some cases, agencies reported that they had 
already determined that programs were not susceptible to significant 
improper payments, despite the fact that the auditor's reports in the 
same PARs identified management challenges, or material internal 
control weaknesses within the programs where the design or operation of 
an internal control procedure did not reduce, to a relatively low 
level, the risk that errors, fraud, or noncompliance that would be 
material to the financial statements may occur and not be detected 
promptly by employees in the normal course of performing their duties. 
This situation appears contradictory.

Although OMB has required agencies to perform various improper-payment-
related identification and corrective action activities for the past 
three years for these 46 programs, figure 1 shows that only seven 
agencies reported all of the required elements you asked about--
estimated amounts, initiatives taken to reduce improper payments, and 
impediments to improper payment prevention or reduction--representing 
only 9[Footnote 5] of the 46 programs (20 percent). One of the 
agencies, for one of its programs, reported estimated improper payment 
amounts, discussed ongoing collaborative efforts made with and between 
program partners (such as state agencies) to improve payment accuracy 
and to share "best practice" information, and further reported that 
recent legislation weakened the penalties imposed on program partners 
for high error rates and reduced the incentives offered for lower 
rates. Another agency reported an improper payment amount for three of 
its four required programs, reported initiatives such as improving 
program guidance and training, and addressed impediments such as the 
lack of available income data needed to verify applicant-provided 
income information. A third agency reported an estimate for one of its 
three required programs, and further reported initiatives including 
promoting and funding data exchanges with program partners, and 
reported that its principal impediment was the cost of detecting 
eligibility issues.

For 10[Footnote 6] of the 46 programs represented in six agencies, the 
agencies estimated improper payment amounts and initiatives taken to 
reduce improper payments, but did not address any impediments. For one 
program, an agency estimated improper payments and discussed 
initiatives to correct benefit computation errors and beneficiary 
earnings test improvements. Another is performing annual on-site 
reviews. One agency reported an improper payment amount for a program 
and discussed initiatives, such as implementing an automated system to 
identify coding and billing errors. Other initiatives reported by 
agencies included conducting recovery audits, collaborating with other 
federal agencies to identify and recover payments made to ineligible 
beneficiaries, and issuing policy notices and providing training to 
agency personnel on program processes.

Six agencies reported estimated amounts for 11[Footnote 7] programs, 
but did not discuss initiatives taken to reduce improper payments and 
impediments to preventing or reducing improper payments. For three 
programs, agencies reported no estimated amounts or impediments, but 
did discuss initiatives taken to reduce improper payments, such as 
expanding annual post award monitoring and oversight processes. One 
agency did not report estimated improper payment amounts or discuss 
initiatives taken to reduce improper payments for one of its programs 
but identified some of the impediments it has encountered in preventing 
or reducing them, such as the unavailability of the data necessary to 
accurately measure improper payments.

For 11[Footnote 8] of the 46 programs for which agencies were required 
to report improper payment information in their fiscal year 2003 PARs, 
four agencies did not report estimated amounts, initiatives taken to 
reduce improper payments, or impediments to preventing or reducing 
improper payments, even though OMB Circular A-11, Section 57, 
originally required agencies to report improper payment data, 
assessments, and action plans with their initial budget submissions 
since July 2001. One agency reported, "… erroneous payments are very 
unlikely … limited to instances of fraud… " Agencies for several 
programs reported only that they were continuing to develop improper 
payment error rates, but reported no further information.

Stronger Internal Control Systems Are Key to Reducing Governmentwide 
Improper Payments:

In October 2001, we issued an executive guide on strategies to manage 
improper payments that was based on the results of information that we 
obtained from public and private sector organizations that identified 
and took actions designed to reduce improper payments in their 
programs.[Footnote 9] We found that the actions that these 
organizations took shared a common focus of improving the internal 
control system over problem areas. This system consists of five primary 
components--the control environment, risk assessments, control 
activities, information and communications, and monitoring. Internal 
controls are not one event, but a series of actions and activities that 
occur throughout an entity's operations and on an ongoing basis. People 
make internal controls work, and responsibility for good internal 
control rests with all managers.

One of the biggest hurdles that many entities face in the process of 
managing improper payments is overcoming the tendency to deny the 
problem. It is easy to rationalize avoiding or deferring action to 
address a problem if you do not know how big the problem is. The nature 
and magnitude of the problem--determined through a systematic risk 
assessment process--needs to be determined and openly communicated to 
all relevant parties. When this occurs, especially in a strong control 
environment, denial is no longer an option, and managers have the 
information, as well as the incentive, to begin addressing improper 
payments.

The Federal Managers' Financial Integrity Act of 1982 Set Internal 
Control Review and Reporting Requirements:

Fraud, waste, and abuse in federal activities and programs lead to the 
loss of billions of dollars of government funds, erode public 
confidence, and undermine the federal government's ability to operate 
effectively. Unfortunately, that assessment comes from a 1985 GAO 
report[Footnote 10] on federal agencies implementation of 31 U.S.C. 
3512 (c), (d) (commonly referred to as the Federal Managers' Financial 
Integrity Act of 1982 (Financial Integrity Act)). Continuing concern 
over the poor condition of government internal controls and accounting 
systems led the Congress to pass this legislation that requires, among 
other things, ongoing evaluations and reports on the adequacy of the 
systems of internal accounting and administrative control of each 
executive agency. It requires the head of each agency to issue an 
annual report that identifies material weaknesses identified through 
the assessment process and the actions planned to correct those 
weaknesses.

An August 1984 GAO report[Footnote 11] that summarized the results of 
our governmentwide review of agencies' efforts to implement the 
Financial Integrity Act found that agencies made a good start in the 
first year of assessing their internal control and accounting systems 
and have demonstrated a management commitment to implementing the act. 
Top agency and OMB managers were becoming involved. The report 
characterized the first-year effort as a learning experience and noted 
that much remained to be done to complete the evaluation process and 
correct the problems identified. Our 1984 review of the material 
weaknesses identified in the annual reports of 17 major agencies 
revealed that:

* 16 agencies reported accounting/financial management system 
weaknesses;

* 14 agencies reported procurement weaknesses;

* 13 agencies reported property management weaknesses;

* 12 agencies reported cash management weaknesses;

* 12 agencies reported grant, loan, and debt collection management 
weaknesses; and:

* 8 agencies reported eligibility and entitlement weaknesses.

We concluded that, since the initial work in implementing the act had 
been accomplished, agencies needed to develop comprehensive plans to 
correct the material weaknesses identified. Correction of problems 
represents the "bottom line" of the act. We further recognized that 
many of the weaknesses identified were long-standing. They did not 
develop overnight, and their solutions would not be easy. It would take 
a sustained, high-priority commitment. In commenting on this report, 
OMB agreed that a long-term commitment to improving internal control 
was necessary and that weaknesses identified in the first year must be 
corrected.

In our December 1985 report, we cited a congressional committee report 
on the first-year implementation of the Financial Integrity Act, based 
on a May 22, 1984, hearing held by the Subcommittee on Legislation and 
National Security, House Committee on Government Operations, on federal 
efforts to improve internal control and accounting systems and on the 
Financial Integrity Act's implementation, that stated the following:

"According to the testimony, a good beginning has been made toward 
implementing the Act. It is clear, however, that much more remains to 
be done …. This year agencies began the review process. Now, they must 
improve on the work they did last year and conduct in-depth internal 
control reviews. Above all, corrective actions must be taken on the 
deficiencies found."[Footnote 12]

In our report, we noted that, while the act required agency heads to 
report material weaknesses in their annual reports, the annual reviews 
conducted identified significant numbers of less serious internal 
control weaknesses. For example, although Treasury did not report any 
additional material weaknesses in its 1984 annual statement, its 
component bureaus identified 89 weaknesses that they considered 
material and reported 127 associated corrective actions. According to 
Treasury's 1984 annual statement, the bureaus had completed 46 (36 
percent) of these 127 corrective actions. Similarly, the military 
services identified and reported correcting thousands of control 
weaknesses at lower levels. Army managers, for example, reported 
correcting 3,600 internal control weaknesses in 1984 that were not 
considered to be material from an agency perspective.

In November 1989 testimony,[Footnote 13] former Comptroller General 
Charles A. Bowsher again addressed this issue by noting that based on 
the results of the internal control assessments and examinations of the 
systems problems that agencies have reported and that GAO and federal 
audit organizations have identified in their audit reports, it is 
evident that:

* the government does not currently have the internal control and 
accounting systems necessary to effectively operate many of its 
programs and safeguard its assets;

* many weaknesses are long-standing and have resulted in billions of 
dollars of losses and wasteful spending;

* major government scandals and system breakdowns serve to reinforce 
the public's perception that the federal government is poorly managed, 
with little or no control over its activities; and:

* top-level officials must provide leadership if this situation is to 
change.

In summary, during the 1980s, federal agencies conducted significant 
numbers of internal control assessments and identified and reported 
taking corrective actions to eliminate the weaknesses found. Yet, at 
the end of the decade, controls remained inadequate and these 
weaknesses resulted in billions in losses and wasteful spending. 
Significantly, the final item cited by Mr. Bowsher in his 1989 
testimony is indicative of a weak control environment. Our past work 
has shown that the control environment is perhaps the most significant 
component of internal control to the identification, development, and 
implementation of activities to reduce improper payments. As pointed 
out in our executive guide on managing improper payments, without this 
top-level leadership, the outlook for overall improvements in the 
governmentwide effort to reduce improper payments is limited.

Initiatives since 1990 Have Also Emphasized the Importance of Strong 
Internal Controls:

From the early 1990s to the present, additional initiatives called for 
actions to strengthen internal controls over federal programs and 
financial management activities. The Chief Financial Officers Act (CFO) 
of 1990[Footnote 14] as expanded by the Government Performance and 
Results Act of 1993 (GPRA);[Footnote 15] the Government Management 
Reform Act of 1994;[Footnote 16] and the President's Management Agenda 
are a few of these initiatives. Our reports that discuss these 
initiatives may not specifically focus on improper payments and agency 
efforts to reduce such payments but they do discuss agency internal 
controls over various programs, activities, or both and actions to 
identify weaknesses in those controls and to design and implement 
actions to eliminate those weaknesses. Therefore, there is a direct 
relationship between agency activities regarding those initiatives and 
agency actions to implement the Improper Payments Act.

In recent testimony before this subcommittee on the fiscal year 2003 
U.S. government financial statements,[Footnote 17] Comptroller General 
David M. Walker noted that certain material weaknesses[Footnote 18] in 
internal control and in selected accounting and reporting practices 
resulted in conditions that continued to prevent GAO from being able to 
provide the Congress and American citizens with an opinion as to 
whether the consolidated financial statements of the U.S. government 
are fairly stated in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting 
principles. One of these material weaknesses involved improper payments 
that, based on the limited information available, exceeded $35 billion 
annually. The testimony noted that without a systematic measurement of 
the extent of improper payments, federal agency management cannot 
determine (1) if improper payment problems that require corrective 
action exist, (2) mitigation strategies and the appropriate amount of 
investments to reduce them, and (3) the success of efforts implemented 
to reduce improper payments.

GPRA is the centerpiece of a statutory framework that the Congress put 
in place during the 1990s to help resolve the long-standing management 
problems that have undermined the federal government's efficiency and 
effectiveness and to provide greater accountability for results. GPRA 
was intended to address several broad purposes, including strengthening 
the confidence of the American people in their government; improving 
federal program effectiveness, accountability, and service delivery; 
and enhancing congressional decision making by providing more objective 
information on program performance.

It has resulted in a great deal of progress in making federal agencies 
more results oriented, but numerous challenges still exist. Top 
leadership commitment and sustained attention to achieving results, 
both within the agencies and at OMB, is essential to GPRA 
implementation.[Footnote 19] Top leadership commitment is a 
characteristic of a positive control environment. This again raises the 
issue of the adequacy of the control environment at federal agencies. 
Leadership commitment is important, not only to GPRA implementation, 
but other management activities and initiatives, including successful 
implementation of the Improper Payments Act. Our executive guide on 
managing improper payments identified a positive control environment as 
perhaps the most significant element critical to the identification, 
development, and implementation of activities to reduce improper 
payments. The guide can provide useful information to leaders in 
formulating and implementing their programs to reduce improper 
payments.

In an October 2003 report on governmentwide efforts to address improper 
payment problems,[Footnote 20] we noted that, as part of the 
President's Management Agenda, officials at OMB told us that they had 
met with officials from all relevant agencies to provide assistance and 
to ensure that agencies (1) understood the requirements set forth in 
its guidance for implementing the Improper Payments Act, (2) have 
started to inventory their programs and activities for significant risk 
of improper payments, (3) understand the risk assessment process, and 
(4) understand the reporting requirements under the Improper Payments 
Act. In that report, we concluded that the governmentwide effort to 
identify and assess the magnitude of improper payments, to take actions 
to reduce those payments, and to publicly report the results of those 
efforts is generally in its infancy. We further reported that although 
OMB Circular A-11 had required 14 CFO Act agencies to report selected 
improper payment information on 44 programs[Footnote 21] to OMB 
beginning with their fiscal year 2003 budget submissions, those 
agencies had completed risk assessments for only 15 of the programs, 
despite the Congress's mandate in 1982 through the Financial Integrity 
Act that agencies continually assess their internal control systems and 
report annually on their adequacy. Since the issuance of our October 
2003 report, federal agencies have issued their fiscal year 2003 PARs. 
As I discussed earlier in this testimony, the fiscal year 2003 PARs 
typically contained limited amounts of improper payment information 
even for those programs previously cited in Circular A-11 for which a 
reporting requirement has existed since agency submissions of their 
fiscal year 2003 budgets to OMB.

Our executive guide on managing improper payments recognized that in 
federal agencies, implementation of a strong system of internal control 
will likely not be easy or quick and will require strong support and 
continuous action from the President, the Congress, top-level 
administration appointees, and agency management officials. Once 
committed to a plan of action, they must remain steadfast supporters of 
the end goals and their support must be transparent to all. Agencies 
must be held accountable for appropriately managing and controlling 
their programs and safeguarding program assets. OMB must continue to 
provide direction and support to agency management in the 
implementation of governmentwide efforts, such as those involving 
improper payments, and conduct appropriate oversight of federal agency 
efforts to meet their stewardship and program management 
responsibilities. It is also critical that the Congress continue its 
oversight, through public hearings such as this one, to make it clear 
to agency and OMB officials that efforts to reduce improper payments 
are expected and that failure to do so is not an option.

Conclusions:

Since 1982, various legislative and administrative initiatives have 
focused on and required agency assessments of internal controls over 
programs and financial management activities. Although these 
initiatives may not specifically target improper payments, by 
emphasizing internal controls, they have recognized the important role 
that internal controls have in ensuring that federal programs achieve 
their intended results and that federal agencies operate them 
effectively and efficiently. Given this long-standing emphasis on 
internal control and the various long-standing requirements to identify 
and implement actions to correct control system weaknesses identified, 
it is fair to ask two questions. First, is it reasonable to expect that 
federal agencies have significant information on the condition of 
internal controls over their programs and activities? Second, should 
agencies be able to identify their programs and activities that are 
susceptible to improper payments and to meet the other requirements 
established by the Improper Payments Act? Based on the legislative and 
administrative initiatives over the past 20-plus years, I think that 
the answer to both is an emphatic yes.

Many positive improvements have resulted from the various initiatives 
related to internal control and financial management over the past 20-
plus years. However, I am concerned that we continue to see a trend in 
agency actions to address internal control problems. Agencies often get 
off to a good start, but they do not sustain their efforts. Given this 
history and the unknown and potentially significant magnitude of 
improper payments governmentwide, it is clear that we are facing a 
major management challenge in adequately addressing the problem. The 
needed governmentwide initiatives are in place, they must now be 
effectively implemented. Key to this effort is the need for a strong 
control environment that creates a culture of accountability and 
establishes a positive and supportive attitude toward reducing improper 
payments.

This concludes my prepared statement. I would be pleased to respond to 
any questions that you or other Members of the Subcommittee may have.

Contacts and Acknowledgments:

For further information, please contact McCoy Williams, Director, 
Financial Management and Assurance, at (202) 512-9508, or Tom 
Broderick, Assistant Director, at (202) 512-8705. You can also reach 
them by e-mail at [Hyperlink, williamsm1@gao.gov]or [Hyperlink, 
broderickt@gao.gov]. Individuals making key contributions to this 
testimony included Bonnie McEwan and Donell Ries.

[End of section]

Appendix I: Agencies and Programs for Which OMB Circular A-11 Required 
Erroneous Payment Information for Fiscal Year 2003:

I. Department of Agriculture: 
1. Food Stamps.
2. Commodity Loan Program.
3. National School Lunch and Breakfast.
4. Women, Infants, and Children.

II. Department of Defense: 
5. Military Retirement.
6. Military Health Benefits.

III. Department of Education: 
7. Student Financial Assistance.
8. Title I.

IV. Department of Health and Human Services: 
9. Head Start.
10. Medicare.
11. Medicaid.
12. TANF.
13. Foster Care - Title IV-E.
14. State Children's Insurance Program.
15. Child Care and Development Fund.

V. Department of Housing and Urban Development: 
16. Low Income Public Housing.
17. Section 8 Tenant Based.
18. Section 8 Project Based.
19. Community Development Block Grants 
(Entitlement Grants, States/Small Cities).

VI. Department of Labor: 
20. Unemployment Insurance.
21. Federal Employee Compensation Act.
22. Workforce Investment Act.

VII. Department of the Treasury: 
23. Earned Income Tax Credit.

VIII. Department of Transportation: 
24. Airport Improvement Program.
25. Highway Planning and Construction.
26. Federal Transit - Capital Investment Grants.
27. Federal Transit - Formula Grants.

IX. Department of Veterans Affairs: 
28. Compensation.
29. Dependency and Indemnity Compensation.
30. Pension.
31. Insurance Programs.

X. Environmental Protection Agency: 
32. Clean Water State Revolving Funds.
33. Drinking Water State Revolving Funds.

XI. National Science Foundation: 
34. Research and Education Grants and Cooperative Agreements.

XII. Office of Personnel Management: 
35. Retirement Program (Civil Service Retirement System and Federal 
Employees' Retirement System).
36. Federal Employees Health Benefits Program.
37. Federal Employees' Group Life Insurance.

XIII. Railroad Retirement Board: 
38. Retirement and Survivors Benefits.
39. Railroad Unemployment Insurance Benefits.

XIV. Small Business Administration: 
40. 7(a) Business Loan Program.
41. 504 Certified Development Companies.
42. Disaster Assistance.
43. Small Business Investment Companies.

XV. Social Security Administration: 
44. Old Age and Survivors' Insurance.
45. Disability Insurance.
46. Supplemental Security Income Program.

Source: GAO.

[End of table]

(195029):

FOOTNOTES

[1] Section 57 was eliminated from OMB Circular A-11. See OMB Circular 
A-11, Transmittal Memorandum #77, July 25, 2003. Appendix I lists the 
15 agencies and 46 programs previously cited in Section 57.

[2] Pub. L. No. 107-300, 116 Stat. 2350 (Nov. 26, 2002).

[3] Office of Management and Budget Memorandum M-03-13, "Improper 
Payments Information Act of 2002 (Public Law 107-300)," May 21, 2003.

[4] OMB's guidance uses the term erroneous payments rather than 
improper payments. We consider the terms synonymous. 

[5] The nine programs are (1) DOL - Unemployment Insurance, (2) ED - 
Student Financial Assistance, (3) HHS - Medicare, (4) HUD - Low Income 
Public Housing, (5) HUD - Section 8 Project Based, (6) HUD - Section 8 
Tenant Based, (7) SSA - Disability Insurance, (8) TREAS - Earned Income 
Tax Credit, and (9) USDA - Food Stamps.

[6] The 10 programs are (1) DOL - FECA, (2) DOT - Airport Improvement 
Program, (3) DOT - Highway Planning and Construction, (4) EPA - Clean 
Water State Revolving Funds, (5) SBA - 7(a) Business Loan Program, (6) 
SSA - Old Age Survivors' Insurance, and (7) SSA - SSI Program, (8) VA - 
Compensation, (9) VA - Insurance Programs, and (10) VA --Pension.

[7] The 11 programs are (1) DOD - Military Health Benefits, (2) DOD - 
Military Retirement Fund, (3) DOL - Workforce Investment Act, (4) DOT - 
Federal Transit-Capital Investment Grants, (5) DOT - Federal Transit-
Formula Grants, (6) EPA - Drinking Water State Revolving Funds, (7) 
OPM-Federal Employees Group Life Insurance, (8) OPM - Federal 
Employee's Health Benefits Program, (9) OPM - Retirement Program (CSRS 
and FERS), (10) RRB - Retirement and Survivor Benefits, and (11) RRB - 
Unemployment Insurance.

[8] The 11 programs are (1) ED - Title I, (2) HHS - Medicaid, (3) HHS - 
Head Start, (4) HHS - TANF, (5) HHS - Foster Care-Title IV-E, (6) HHS - 
State Children's Insurance Program, (7) HHS - Child Care and 
Development Fund, (8) HUD - CDBG (Entitlement Grants, States/Small 
Cities), (9) SBA - 504 Certified Development Companies, (10) SBA - 
Disaster Assistance, and (11) SBA - Small Business Investment 
Companies.

[9] U.S. General Accounting Office, Strategies to Manage Improper 
Payments: Learning From Public and Private Sector Organizations, GAO-
02-69G (Washington, D.C.: October 2001). 

[10] U.S. General Accounting Office, Financial Integrity Act: The 
Government Faces Serious Internal Control and Accounting Systems 
Problems, GAO/AFMD-86-14 (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 23, 1985). 

[11] U.S. General Accounting Office, Implementation of the Federal 
Managers' Financial Integrity Act: First Year, GAO/OCG-84-3 
(Washington, D.C.: Aug. 24, 1984). 

[12] House Government Operations Committee, House of Representatives, 
First Year Implementation of the Federal Managers' Financial Integrity 
Act, H.R. Rep. No. 98-937 (1984).

[13] U.S. General Accounting Office, Federal Internal Control and 
Financial Management Systems Remain Weak and Obsolete, GAO/T-AFMD-90-9 
(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 29, 1989).

[14] Pub. L. No. 101-576, 104 Stat. 2838 (Nov. 15, 1990).

[15] Pub. L. No. 103-62, 107 Stat. 285 (Aug. 3, 1993). 

[16] Pub. L. No. 103-356, 108 Stat. 3410 (Oct. 13, 1994).

[17] U.S. General Accounting Office, Fiscal Year 2003 U.S. Government 
Financial Statements: Sustained Improvement in Federal Financial 
Management Is Crucial to Addressing Our Nation's Future Fiscal 
Challenges, GAO-04-477T (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 3, 2004).

[18] A material weakness is a condition that precludes the entity's 
internal control from providing reasonable assurance that 
misstatements, losses, or noncompliance material in relation to the 
financial statements or to stewardship information would be prevented 
or detected on a timely basis. 

[19] U.S. General Accounting Office, Results-Oriented Government: GPRA 
Has Established a Solid Foundation for Achieving Greater Results, GAO-
04-38 (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 10, 2004). 

[20] U.S. General Accounting Office, Financial Management: Status of 
the Governmentwide Efforts to Address Improper Payment Problems, GAO-
04-99 (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 17, 2003). 

[21] Our scope in that report was limited to only the 23 CFO Act 
agencies, of which 14 agencies and 44 programs were previously cited in 
OMB Circular A-11, Section 57. We did not review the Railroad 
Retirement Board.