Abstract
The United States has a food assistance structure that, by design, does not assure that households receiving food assistance will be food secure, is deeply inefficient, and is at financial and structural risk. The two most common forms of food assistance used today are Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly the Food Stamp Program) and charitable food assistance in the form of groceries (provided through a network of food banks, food pantries, and other related programs). Approximately 43 million persons participate in SNAP and nearly one-third of them also rely on a food pantry for groceries. The use of charitable food assistance by persons relying on SNAP demonstrates that SNAP’s benefit level and structure does not sufficiently result in food security. The article argues that reinstating a purchase requirement for SNAP and increasing the level of benefits provided to SNAP participants would increase the food security of participants, alleviate the chronic demand for food from food banks and food pantries, and ultimately allow the charitable food assistance network to better accomplish its goal of providing emergency food assistance to the needy.
©2017 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- The Economists’ Voice: Special Issue on Nutrition and Poverty Introduction
- Poverty and Obesity as Political Indicators
- Ensuring Access to Fruits and Vegetables for the Nation’s Most Vulnerable – Contributions of WIC and SNAP
- Food Insecurity and Health Outcomes
- Linking SNAP to Food Security: Exploring Reinstating a Purchase Requirement and Tying Benefits to the Low-Cost Food Plan
- Caloric Sweetened Beverage Taxes: A Toothless Solution?
Articles in the same Issue
- The Economists’ Voice: Special Issue on Nutrition and Poverty Introduction
- Poverty and Obesity as Political Indicators
- Ensuring Access to Fruits and Vegetables for the Nation’s Most Vulnerable – Contributions of WIC and SNAP
- Food Insecurity and Health Outcomes
- Linking SNAP to Food Security: Exploring Reinstating a Purchase Requirement and Tying Benefits to the Low-Cost Food Plan
- Caloric Sweetened Beverage Taxes: A Toothless Solution?