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How does expanded SNAP (Food Stamp) eligibility affect the income volatility of vulnerable populations?

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Abstract

I examine how the SNAP program (formerly the Food Stamp Program) affects the income volatility of vulnerable populations. Monthly income fluctuates by about 20 percent on average from the annual mean for households below the poverty line and the concern is that these households face considerable consumption volatility as a result. The first two chapters study how state level expansions in SNAP eligibility between 1996 and 2011 have affected household income volatility using the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP). I use a reduced form simulated instrument approach to isolate the impact of household eligibility gain on overall and non-SNAP income volatility (the latter captures the household behavioral response). My simulated instrument captures eligibility changes induced by state level changes to vehicle, asset and permanent resident eligibility rules. I further investigate household behavioral changes that are likely to be affected by the program, including hours worked and participation in other social safety net programs. I find that SNAP eligibility reduces total household income volatility of single mothers by a non-statistically significant 11 percent. The stabilizing nature of the SNAP benefit formula contributes to about a quarter of this reduction.

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Date Issued

2018-05-30

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Economics; Public policy

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Committee Chair

Barseghyan, Levon

Committee Co-Chair

Committee Member

Coate, Stephen
Lovenheim, Michael F.

Degree Discipline

Economics

Degree Name

Ph. D., Economics

Degree Level

Doctor of Philosophy

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Government Document

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Attribution 4.0 International

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dissertation or thesis

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