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The Decline in Food Stamp Program Participation in the 1990's
- 英文名称:
- The Decline in Food Stamp Program Participation in the 1990's
- 作者:
- Parke E. Wilde; Peggy J. Cook; Craig Gundersen; Mark Nord; Laura Tiehen
- 工作单位:
- USDA's Economic Research Service
- 关键词:
- Food Stamp Program; welfare reform; economic conditions; caseload dynamics;
- 年份:
- 2000
- 出版地:
- Washington, DC, USA
- 总页数:
- 25 pp
- 语种:
- English
- 摘要:
- The Food Stamp Program saw an unprecedented decline in participation from 27.5 million participants in 1994 to 18.2 million participants in 1999. A strong economy and changes in social welfare programs drove this change. An econometric model with State-level data calculated that 35 percent of the caseload decline from 1994 to 1998 was associated with changing economic conditions and 12 percent with program reform and political variables. Household-level data from the Current Population Survey lead to the conclusion that 28 percent of the total change in participation was associated with a decrease in the number of people with low income (below 130 percent of the poverty line) and 55 percent was due to a decline in the proportion of low-income people who participate.
相关资源
- Explaining Recent Trends in Food Stamp Program Caseloads: Final Report
- The Consequences of Welfare Reform and Economic Change for the Food Stamp Program--Illustrations from Microsimulation: Final Report
- The Changing Food Assistance Landscape: The Food Stamp Program in a Post-Welfare Reform Environment
- Issues in Food Assistance-The Standard Deduction in the Food Stamp Benefit Formula
- Food Stamp Leavers Research Study-Study of ABAWDs Leaving the Food Stamp Program in South Carolina: Final Report
- Food Stamp Leavers Research Study-Study of Nonwelfare Families Leaving the Food Stamp Program in South Carolina: Final Report
- Informing Food and Nutrition Assistance Policy: 10 Years of Research at ERS
- Issues in Food Assistance-Assessing the Self-Sufficiency of Food Stamp Leavers
- Changing Participation in Food Assistance Programs Among Low-Income Children After Welfare Reform
- Issues in Food Assistance-Reforming Welfare: What Does It Mean for Rural Areas?