One in eight Americans receive food stamps,
reports The New York Times, as do nearly one in four children. The high
enrollment rate is part of the recent unemployment crisis but is also
due to longer trends, including a Bush-era outreach effort and a push
to reduce the social stigma of food stamps. Food stamp requirements
have also been loosened. For example, Americorps volunteers have easier
access. Is this a good thing?
- Important Social Service The American Prospect's Monica Potts notes
that there will always be a bottom rung. "[O]fficials saw that rushing
people into low-wage jobs didn't really help alleviate poverty," she
writes. "There will likely always be people unable to work, and there
will always be jobs on the bottom of the pay scale. The only thing that
changes is whether we decide those people should have access to an
easier life."
- Rapidly Changing Politics of Poverty The Washington Independent's Megan Carpentier looks at
the shift in Republican thinking since Obama entered office. "Everyone
from Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) to George W. Bush and his food stamp
administrator Eric Bost to former Wisconsin governor and presidential
candidate Tommy Thompson is a food stamp booster for the working poor --
the people who make minimum wage but can't make ends meet. But you can
have a job in this country and still go hungry -- and some people who
acknowledge that think the best solution is just to give companies more tax breaks."
- Program's Unnecessary Sprawl The Atlantic Council's James Joyner sighs,
"rather clearly, we've taken this to absurd levels, creating a
self-licking ice cream cone in which the program's main focus is on
expanding the program. Do we really need to be providing food stamps to
able-bodied college graduates who are Americorps volunteers?" He adds,
"This is a classic case where good intentions and rent seeking collide."
- Tremendous Good Per Dollar EconoBlogger Mike Konczal finds
that it only costs $1488 to keep one person on food stamps for a year.
That's "less than half of what we give someone who makes $175,000/year
to lever up when they buy a gigantic home. It also has the twin
benefits of helping people suffering through double-digit unemployment,
as well as the the highest 'bank for the buck' rating as stimulus as
estimate by Mark Zandi of Moody's Economy.com."
- Proves Poverty Is New Norm Gawker's Hamilton Nolan is sad.
"The Way We Live Now: coming to terms with hopelessness," he writes.
"This is the sort of thing that normal Americans are dealing with,
pretty much always and forevermore! Food stamps and shitty housing and
poverty-level jobs with few if any benefits. The American dream is
fully intact." Nolan does not note that the rise in food stamp usage began in 2001, well before the current financial crisis.
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