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Food Stamp Recruitment Is Not an Economic Development Strategy

and Shirley Iverson

A record number of people in Oregon entered the food assistance program during 2008. It is tempting to attribute this to poor economic conditions, but that would be wrong. Over the past decade, Oregon consistently has had some of the highest participation rates for federal food aid of any state in the nation, even in years when the economy was booming. The reason is that state agencies and self-styled “anti-hunger” advocates have aggressively recruited people into the food assistance program. Advocates view federal aid as “free money,” and believe that even more people should sign up as a way of bringing tax dollars into the local economy.

This approach callously promotes a lifestyle of government dependence among those most in need of self-reliance skills, while destroying wealth in the national economy. It’s time for a new strategy.

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), formerly known as Food Stamps, is administered at the national level by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and in Oregon by the Department of Human Services (DHS). The program began experimentally in 1939 as a four-year pilot project to help dispose of surplus crops, but the permanent program we know today was inaugurated by Congress in 1964. The program is targeted to low-income and single-parent households, and benefits are distributed via electronic debit cards (known locally as the Oregon Trail card).

The SNAP program is intended to supplement the food budgets of low-income families. It is important to note “supplement,” not “replace,” the family food budget. SNAP benefits are paid for 100% by federal tax dollars, even though DHS actually runs the program and delivers the benefits.

During the 1990s, Oregon began an aggressive Food Stamp recruitment program. As a result, by 2001 Oregon had the third-highest participation rate (or take-up rate) of any state in the nation, and vaulted into the top spot the next year. Since 2001 Oregon has never dropped out of the top five in national participation rates.

This is in contrast to all other western states. In 2006 California had the lowest take-up rate in the nation, at 50%. Washington, Idaho, Montana, Nevada and Wyoming were all in the bottom 15 among states. Meanwhile, the national participation rate was 67%, and Oregon was tied for fifth at 85%.

SNAP advocates are proud of this trend. They claim that every $5 in federal food aid money generates $9.20 in “total community spending.” The website of the Oregon Hunger Relief Task Force states, “Increased participation means that Oregon now brings in more than $450 million in federal food stamp dollars annually. If all eligible households participated, Oregon could bring in almost $100 million more each year.”

The message from advocates is clear: It is the patriotic duty of every low-income family to sign up for those free federal dollars, no matter how humiliating it is to actually use them.

The federal government has been fully complicit in this dysfunctional recruitment. The USDA has a public “goal” of increasing the national take-up rate to 68% by 2010, and has awarded activist states like Oregon special grants as rewards for their outreach. In 2007 the Oregon DHS received a “bonus” of $1.7 million, which was used to finance additional outreach and recruitment, along with nutritional education. In September 2008 USDA gave out $1.5 million to Oregon.
The federal government also gave $1 million to 14 faith-based and community organizations in September to improve access to, and awareness of, the Food Stamp program. Catholic Charities of Portland was one of the 14.
Taxpayer-financed advocacy leads to high take-up rates, which results in even more tax subsidies to Oregon through increased monthly SNAP benefits — sort of a perpetual motion machine powered by federal dollars. The trend itself has almost nothing to do with actual levels of hunger; it’s all about marketing.

The sad part is that SNAP is not designed to encourage self-sufficiency or saving. In fact, prudent household shopping is explicitly discouraged. If SNAP recipients are thrifty and spend less per month than they are allocated, their benefits eventually will be cut back. Therefore, the bureaucratic message is to “spend it all now,” exactly the opposite of what we usually encourage people to do when they are on limited income.

We need much more creativity in addressing food insecurity, if in fact politicians actually care about it. Instead of just giving a hand-out, we should give a “hand up” by addressing root causes of hunger. For instance, according to the Oregon Food Bank, only 36% of their clients have post-high school education, compared with 59% of the general population. Clearly a good education is critical, yet Oregon refuses to offer a money-back guarantee to students trapped in low-performing public schools.

Ironically, while anti-hunger advocates are thrilled to see taxpayers spend $450 million per year in food vouchers, they oppose one penny being spent on educational vouchers, even though education is a real solution and SNAP is just a band-aid.

We also could help the 29% of Oregon Food Bank clients who are actively looking for work but do not have a car. Research shows that car ownership increases the likelihood of steady employment, yet Oregon policymakers insist on squandering hundreds of millions of tax dollars annually on high-cost rail transit that is irrelevant to most job-seekers. Diverting just a small fraction of transit money (one percent or less) into a low-income car loan program would be a cost-effective way of reducing food insecurity.

Being “Number 1 for Food Stamps” is nothing to be proud of. Our goal should be to join California at the bottom of the heap, by actually helping people to become self-reliant.


John A. Charles, Jr. [1] is President and CEO of Cascade Policy Institute [2]. Shirley Iverson is a consultant for Cascade’s Government Transparency Project. From 1988 to 2005, Ms. Iverson held several high-level leadership positions within the Oregon Department of Human Services.

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