Skip to content

Government
2021

February 9, 2021

Press Release Federal Government 2020

For more information contact:
Denise DiMeglio
[email protected]

Citizen Satisfaction With Federal Government Services Hits Lowest Point Since 2015, ACSI Data Show

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (February 9, 2021) — Citizen satisfaction with U.S. federal government services is in free fall.

Citizen satisfaction plummets 4.4% to a score of 65.1 (out of 100), according to the American Customer Satisfaction Index’s (ACSI®) Federal Government Report 2020.

“For the third straight year, satisfaction with the federal government takes a turn for the worse,” says Forrest Morgeson, Assistant Professor of Marketing at Michigan State University and Director of Research at the ACSI. “Marred by the COVID-19 pandemic, a contentious run-up to the November federal elections, and uncertainty following those elections, citizen satisfaction now resides at its lowest level since 2015, making the government’s uphill climb that much steeper.”

Quality of federal government services nosedives

Of the four primary drivers of citizen satisfaction — process, information, customer service, and website — only customer service avoids a tailspin.

Efficiency and ease of government processes diminishes 3% to 66, ease of accessing and clarity of information drops 3% to 69, and perceptions of government website quality tumbles 5% to 71. The professionalism and courtesy of customer service scores highest among the drivers of citizen satisfaction, steady at 74.

These changes reflect a broad and deep erosion of the quality of federal government services experienced by citizens in 2020.

Departments of Commerce and Agriculture stand out, while Department of Treasury comes up short

Citizen satisfaction differs widely across departments, with larger observed variance among federal departments than among companies in most private sector industries.

This year, the Departments of Commerce and Agriculture lead the way, both at 74. The remainder come in well below the economy-wide national ACSI average (74.4 as of the third quarter of 2020), with the Department of Treasury bringing up the rear at 60. It’s worth noting that due to the COVID-19 pandemic, fewer distinct federal departments are captured in the ACSI 2020 sample.

Democrats, Republicans, and Independents each hit lowest satisfaction score in 3-year span

The ACSI federal government study does not measure public approval of specific politicians or political parties. However, political party affiliation is likely to have some influence on citizen satisfaction with government services, according to ACSI data.

Looking at trends in citizen satisfaction by party affiliation between 2019 and 2020, Democrats (down 4% to 68), Republicans (down 7% to 65), and Independents (down 5% to 62) all display declining satisfaction year over year. Each group now records its lowest score since 2018. Only the much smaller group of “Other Party” supporters (+7% to 62) report higher satisfaction in 2020 than in the two prior years.

The ACSI Federal Government Report 2020 is based on interviews with 1,291 users, chosen at random and contacted via email throughout the year. Download the full report, and follow the ACSI on LinkedIn and Twitter at @theACSI.

This press release is also available in PDF format.

Connect With ACSI

Connect With ACSI

Want to get in touch with one of our experts? We’d love to hear from you.
Reach out to us using the form below.

I am interested in the following industries (select all that apply):