A public investigation page published by SomaliScan says Deloitte has received more than $40 billion in US government contracts, combining $30.1 billion in federal contracts (2008–2026) and $10.0 billion in state contracts across 25 states.
The SomaliScan page states that the 25 states listed in its dataset include “failures” linked to systems Deloitte built for government services, and it reports zero debarments in its accounting.
SomaliScan also lists FY2024 federal contract value of $3.9 billion and describes that figure as up 36% year-on-year in its “contract totals” section.
What it Means for Oversight and Accountability
The SomaliScan investigation argues that Deloitte’s role in building benefits technology can create oversight concerns. It says Deloitte builds state Medicaid eligibility systems in 25+ states and also received $926 million from the US Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to “audit and validate those same systems,” comparing the arrangement to a building inspector paid by the builder.
The page outlines what it calls a recurring pattern: Deloitte wins state contracts, launches systems with errors, and then receives new work to fix problems.
As background, the site points to court and official commentary. It attributes this line to a Tennessee ruling in August 2024:
“TEDS is flawed, and TennCare knows that it is flawed.
SomaliScan states its data comes from public records and “may contain errors or omissions,” and it says the information is for research and education and should be independently verified.
Discussion