How AI Can Cut Through Bureaucracy, Boost Efficiency, and Build Trust in Government

By  Heidi Kim Richard Sargeant Miguel Carrasco Joerg Hildebrandt Steven Mills Christopher Daniel Madeleine Shaw, and  Ethan Gromet
Article 12 MIN read

Key Takeaways

AI is already beginning to transform public services—streamlining processes, saving costs, and empowering workers to deliver on rising citizen expectations. Immediate, lasting impact is within reach for government agencies that adopt the technology.
  • By using AI in areas like case processing, agencies can save up to 35% of budget costs over the next ten years.
  • AI also helping employees—the most vital assets in an agency’s adoption of AI—work through administrative backlog with document routing and citizen communication capabilities.
  • Leaders can transform their agencies by applying the technology in high-volume, high-impact areas and scaling quickly.
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Governments are under mounting pressure to deliver on rising citizen expectations while managing budgets during an era of constant regulatory change. The strain is harming an essential aspect of governments’ relationship with the public: trust. Generative AI is the ideal resource to help reshape core government processing functions, profoundly improve citizen experiences, and restore faith in public services.

Solutions like AI agents —next-generation models that provide context and complete tasks autonomously—are helping public servants reengineer manual processes and push through dense backlogs. With well-designed digital tools and thoughtful change management, workers can make decisions faster and undertake more efficient case processing, a vital part of service delivery.

Agencies that deploy AI fully can also save significantly on costs. Traditional cost optimization yields 10%–15% savings; by applying new AI technologies to specific areas such as case processing, governments can save up to 35% of budget costs in impacted areas over the next ten years.

But using AI isn’t only about technology; the strategy to spur adoption also calls for an employee-centric approach to optimizing processes. BCG has observed that 70% of the efforts are focused on people and process improvements. By prioritizing change management, public sector agencies around the world are finding greater ROI and productivity gains—saving hours or even days of processing time per application.

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The GenAI Opportunity in Government Processing

The opening to take advantage of GenAI solutions for government processing could not be more timely, with governments facing increasing budget deficits, mounting administrative backlogs, rising citizen expectations for digital services, and persistent job vacancies. The staffing challenges are exacerbated by consistent workforce attrition.

AI agents can engage interactively with citizen applicants. Models can take in vast quantities of unstructured data and measure it against preset criteria, speeding analysis. Large language models can quickly synthesize findings into prose, producing reports much faster. These capabilities are a great fit for an essential function like government case processing.

Through our work with government clients around the world, we have observed a set of common functions within case processing that GenAI is ideally suited to address. (See Exhibit 1.) Deploying AI to handle these functions leads to immediate results.

How AI Can Cut Through Bureaucracy, Boost Efficiency | Exhibit 1

  1. Real-Time Assistance for Applicants. When a member of the public starts the seemingly simple process of filling out a form, they often run into unclear guidance and eligibility criteria. Calls to help lines pile up.

    AI solutions can optimize call centers and digital engagement channels to provide in-the-moment help to applicants. AI is suited to triaging citizen needs, answering frequently asked questions, and routing inquiries to the right channels. A department of motor vehicles in a US southeastern state used such a solution to reduce unanswered public calls by 6% within just two months.

  2. Automated Data Mapping. Government workers often process paper-based or unstructured applications by hand, and AI offers a welcome improvement to these workflows.

    A health and human services state agency in the US used AI mapping to make hiring more efficient, with AI quickly mapping key answers into a one-page view for the human reviewers, saving time and letting staff focus on assessing the candidate’s fit for the job. Early users noted that the tool not only saved them time in a tedious task but also boosted their comprehensiveness and accuracy when conducting and documenting their reviews.

  3. Document Evaluation and Routing. Assessing documents for completeness, eligibility, and risk can be a slow undertaking. Manual processes further slow routing of the documents to the right department. AI solutions can process documents faster and more accurately by applying consistent rules and highlighting nuances for human review.

    A federal agency in one EU country used AI technology to process unstructured data and multimodal information to streamline permit review for wind turbines. This helped reduce the time spent on compliance checks from 8+ hours per document to under 20 minutes while ensuring consistent application of laws, adaptation to regulatory change, more reliability and transparency, and support in decision making.

  4. Quick Access to Policy Facts. Clear policy details are vital to avoid delays in making and documenting decisions. AI tools help bring clarity to policy by synthesizing and sharing knowledge quickly. (See the sidebar, “Processing Criminal Injury Claims with GenAI.”)
  5. Document Drafting and Citizen Communication. Government workers should communicate with citizens through clear, professional, and polite messages. Automated tools can draft communications in various languages; models can add useful evidence and logic to reports. Workers at the aforementioned health and human services agency cited that AI-drafted communications included more detailed information on historical precedents; this depth further substantiated government records and improved accuracy and consistency of decisions.
Processing Criminal Injury Claims with GenAI
A national agency in a European country responsible for criminal injury compensation needed to improve case processing times and support case workers navigating a complex policy and legal framework.

The agency’s leaders set a goal of faster, more accurate decision making. The BCG team worked with their policy, legal, and operational experts to create a GenAI copilot that helped case workers navigate hundreds of pages of guidance and policy faster and more accurately. The legal and policy teams also analyzed the robustness of the tool through an extensive process of testing and refinement of output accuracy.

As a result, case officers can find the right information more efficiently, which is expected to lead to an 80-day reduction in the average time to process a case.

Where to Start

Government agencies often have multiple case processing workflows that are inherently complex with multiple handoffs and multiple approvals. As leaders begin their journey with AI, they can look to start deploying technology in areas that will quickly drive business value for the organization and meet four conditions:

Deployment of AI in the public sector isn’t as straightforward as plugging in an off-the-shelf solution. Once agencies have selected a starting case process flow, teams can begin with a human-centric approach to design and deploy impactful solutions. Through our work with governments around the world, we’ve learned that for many organizations engaging AI, 10% of the effort lies in algorithms, 20% in enabling technology and infrastructure, and 70% in the most important area, people and processes. In government, there often needs to be an even stronger emphasis on process optimization and change management.

A curated solution strategy must hinge on relentless focus on business value, including improved citizen satisfaction and productivity gains. To unlock this value, it is imperative to design with the end-user in mind—particularly for core processing functions, where government workers today know what they need to be more effective and supported. To get the best impact from AI, it is paramount to design models and workflows to workers’ specific needs.

70%: Prioritize people and processes as the primary drivers for change.

20%: Configure new technology to work seamlessly with current platforms and optimized workflows.

10%: Rigorously test algorithms for error and bias.

Agencies should look to prove value to the citizen and organization during the pilot phase before moving to scaled implementation. (See Exhibit 2.) We often see agencies start with a rapid diagnostic that demonstrates value for the selected case processing workstream before moving into an interactive test-and-build pilot program.

How AI Can Cut Through Bureaucracy, Boost Efficiency | Exhibit 2

Well-deployed AI solutions improve the citizen experience, reduce administration burden for government workers leading to higher job satisfaction and reduced workforce attrition and vacancies.


This isn’t a distant vision. The value for government agencies is genuine, significant, and can be realized in weeks and months, not years.

Authors

Managing Director & Partner

Heidi Kim

Managing Director & Partner
Los Angeles

Managing Director & Partner, Global Leader for City Flow by BCG X, Core Member City Mobility Solutions Hub

Richard Sargeant

Managing Director & Partner, Global Leader for City Flow by BCG X, Core Member City Mobility Solutions Hub
London

Managing Director & Senior Partner, Global Leader, Center for Digital Government, BCG X in Public Sector

Miguel Carrasco

Managing Director & Senior Partner, Global Leader, Center for Digital Government, BCG X in Public Sector
Sydney

Managing Director & Senior Partner; Global Leader, Public Sector Practice

Joerg Hildebrandt

Managing Director & Senior Partner; Global Leader, Public Sector Practice
Dubai

Managing Director &amp; Partner<br/>Chief AI Ethics Officer

Steven Mills

Managing Director & Partner
Chief AI Ethics Officer
Washington, DC

Recruiting Partner

Christopher Daniel

Managing Director & Senior Partner; Global Leader, Economic Development & Finance in Public Sector and Center of Government
Dubai

Principal

Madeleine Shaw

Principal
Chicago

Principal

Ethan Gromet

Principal
BCG X – Manhattan Beach

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