THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 8, 2015
FACT SHEET: Council of Economic Advisers Releases Report Highlighting New Research on SNAP’s Effectiveness and the Importance
of Adequate Food Assistance
A new
report
released today from the White House Council of Economic Advisers (CEA)
finds that the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP),
formerly known as Food Stamps, is highly effective at reducing food
insecurity—the government’s measure for whether households
lack the resources for consistent and dependable access to food. The
report highlights a growing body of research that finds that children
who receive food assistance see improvements in health and academic
performance and that these benefits are mirrored
by long-run improvements in health, educational attainment, and
economic self-sufficiency. The report also features new research that
shows benefit levels are often inadequate to sustain families through
the end of the month—resulting in high-cost consequences,
such as a 27 percent increase in the rate of hospital admissions due to
low blood sugar for low-income adults between the first and last week
of the month, as well as diminished performance on standardized tests
among school age children.
Each month, SNAP helps about 46 million low-income Americans put food on the table.
The large majority
of households receiving SNAP include children, senior citizens,
individuals with disabilities, and working adults. Two-thirds of SNAP
benefits go to households with children.
Today’s CEA report draws on a growing body of high-quality research about food insecurity and SNAP, finding that:
SNAP plays an important role in reducing both poverty and food insecurity in the United States—especially
among children.
·
SNAP
benefits lifted at least 4.7 million people out of poverty in
2014—including 2.1 million children. SNAP also lifted more than 1.3
million children out of deep poverty, or above half of the poverty line
(for example, $11,925 for a family of four).
·
The
temporary expansion of SNAP benefits under the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) lifted roughly 530,000 households out of
food insecurity.
SNAP
benefits support vulnerable populations including children, individuals
with disabilities, and the elderly, as well as an increasing number
of working families.
·
Nearly
one in two households receiving SNAP benefits have children, and
three-quarters of recipient households have a child, an elderly member,
or a member with a disability. Fully 67 percent of the total
value of SNAP benefits go to households with children as these
households on average get larger benefits than households without
children.
·
Over the
past 20 years, the overall share of SNAP recipient households with
earned income rose by 50 percent. Among recipient households with
children, the share with a working adult has doubled since 1990.
SNAP’s
impact on children lasts well beyond their childhood years, providing
long-run benefits for health, education, and economic self-sufficiency.
·
Among
adults who grew up in disadvantaged households when the Food Stamp
Program was first being introduced, access to Food Stamps before birth
and in early childhood led to significant reductions in the
likelihood of obesity and significant increases in the likelihood of
completing high school.
·
Early
exposure to food stamps also led to reductions in metabolic syndrome (a
cluster of conditions associated with heart disease and diabetes) and
increased economic self-sufficiency among disadvantaged
women.
SNAP has particularly large benefits for women and their families.
·
Maternal receipt of Food Stamps during pregnancy reduces the incidence of low birth-weight by between 5 and 23 percent.
·
Exposure
to food assistance in utero and through early childhood has large
overall health and economic self-sufficiency impacts for disadvantaged
women.
The
majority of working-age SNAP recipients already participate in the
labor market, and the program includes important supports to help more
recipients successfully
find and keep work.
·
Fifty-seven
percent of working-age adults receiving SNAP are either working or
looking for work, while 22 percent do not work due to a disability. Many
recipients are also the primary caregivers of young
children or family members with disabilities.
·
SNAP
also supports work through the Employment and Training program, which
directly helps SNAP beneficiaries gain the skills they need to succeed
in the labor market in order to find and retain work. During
fiscal year 2014, this program served about 600,000 SNAP recipients.
Even with SNAP’s positive impact, nearly one in seven American households experienced food insecurity in 2014.
·
These households—which included 15 million children—lacked the resources necessary for consistent and dependable access to food.
·
In 2014, 40 percent of all food-insecure households—and nearly 6 percent of US households overall—were considered to have
very low
food security. This means that, in nearly seven million households, at
least one person in the household missed meals and experienced
disruptions in food intake due to insufficient resources
for food.
While
SNAP benefits allow families to put more food on the table, current
benefit levels are often insufficient to sustain them through the
end of the month, with substantial consequences.
·
More
than half of SNAP households currently report experiencing food
insecurity, and the fraction reporting very low food security has risen
since the end of the temporary benefits expansion under ARRA.
·
New research has linked diminished food budgets at the end of each month to high-cost consequences, including:
o
A drop-off in caloric intake, with estimates of this decline ranging from 10 to 25 percent over the course of the month;
o
A 27
percent increase in the rate of hospital admissions due to low blood
sugar for low-income adults between the first and last week of the
month;
o
An 11
percent increase in the rate of disciplinary actions among school
children in SNAP households between the first and last week of the
month;
o
Diminished
student performance on standardized tests, with performance improving
only gradually again after the next month’s benefits are received.
Administration Efforts to Build on Progress
To
reduce hunger and improve family well-being, the Obama administration
has been and remains dedicated to providing American children and
families with better access
to the nutrition they need to thrive. These investments make a real and
measurable difference in the lives of children and their families, and
ensure a brighter, healthier future for the entire country.
Through
the Recovery Act, the Administration temporarily increased SNAP
benefits by 14 percent during the Great Recession to help families put
food on the table. Reports
indicate that food security among low-income households improved from
2008 to 2009 amidst a severe recession and increased unemployment; a
significant part of that improvement is likely attributable to SNAP.
The
Administration has also developed several initiatives to improve food
security and nutrition for vulnerable children. Through the Community
Eligibility Provision,
schools in high-poverty areas are now able to offer free breakfast and
lunch to all students with significantly less administrative burden.
Recent revisions to the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for
Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) added a cash benefit
to allow participants to purchase fruits and vegetables, a change that
substantially increased the value of the package. The Administration
also has expanded access for low-income children to nutritious food
during the summer months when school meals are unavailable
and the risk of food insecurity is heightened. The results of these
efforts have been promising. In 2014, the U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA) delivered 23 million more summer meals than in 2009. And the
Administration has successfully implemented Summer
Electronic Benefits Transfer for Children (SEBTC) pilots, which provide
additional food assistance to low-income families with children during
the summer months. These pilots were found to reduce very low food
security among children by 26 percent. The President’s
2016 Budget proposed a significant expansion of this effort.
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