The Food Stamp Program has long been an important part of
the nation's anti-poverty policy and has assumed an even bigger
role with the advent of time-limited welfare. Since the passage,
in 1996, of the welfare reform law that placed a five-year
time limit on the receipt of federally funded benefits, the
welfare rolls have dropped dramatically. More families are
likely to leave welfare in the coming years as they begin
reaching their time limits. Meanwhile, public officials and
program administrators who work with people making the transition
from welfare to work have begun to focus more on policies,
such as the Earned Income Tax Credit and childcare subsidies,
designed to ensure that these families are not left in poverty.
Food Stamps figure prominently in this equation, and they
are an important income support, as well, for families who
leave welfare but are not working.
Nonetheless, many families eligible for
Food Stamps do not receive them. In fact, participation in
the Food Stamp Program has fallen substantially since the
mid-1990s, in part because fewer eligible families are participating.
This trend has heightened concerns about the well being of
families who are leaving welfare and has led to efforts to
find out why some of them are not staying on Food Stamps.
This report examines Food Stamp use among
families who leave welfare. It uses a unique data set consisting
of people who were targeted for several welfare-to-work programs
that have been evaluated over the past decade. The data cover
more than 60,000 people who left welfare, across seven programs
in 11 states. Each of the programs was evaluated using a random
assignment design, in which people were assigned at random
to either the program group, subject to the new program being
tested, or the control group, subject to the existing welfare
system in the state at the time of the evaluation. Using these
data, the report examines how many welfare leavers stay on
Food Stamps, what types of families continue to use them,
and why some families do not stay. We also follow families
over time to see how long they remain on Food Stamps after
leaving welfare and, if they did not stay on initially, when
and if they return. Finally, in an effort to glimpse the effects
of welfare reform, we examine whether patterns of Food Stamp
use differ for people in the program groups and, therefore,
subject to the welfare-to-work program in each evaluation
, compared with people in the control groups. The programs
evaluated include three key components - mandatory participation
in employment or education activities, enhanced financial
incentives, and time limits-used alone and in combination,
covering the range of policies states have put in place in
response to welfare reform.
Findings in Brief
- Forty-two percent of the welfare leavers continued
on Food Stamps after leaving welfare. Rates of use varied across types
of families. Controlling for a range of background characteristics,
for example, black and Hispanic leavers were more likely to stay on
than white leavers, and leavers in pubic housing were more likely to
stay on than those in private housing. Rates of use also varied considerably
across states, even after controlling for differences in the characteristics
of welfare leavers. Leavers in California, for example, were less likely
to stay on Food Stamps than those in Vermont or Oregon.
- Differences in eligibility partly explain why some
families do not remain on Food Stamps; those who do not stay on have
higher incomes than those who do, usually because of the presence of
other earners in the household. Nonetheless, a majority of welfare leavers
who do not stay on Food Stamps appear to be eligible, and most of these
families have incomes low enough to qualify for substantial Food Stamp
benefits. Lack of information about eligibility rules and (particularly
for single, working parents) the hassles of applying or reapplying for
benefits are important reasons families do not stay on. Stigma associated
with benefit receipt does not appear to be an important deterrent to
Food Stamp use.
- The duration of most Food Stamp use after leaving
welfare is fairly short; half of the families leave within one year.
For these families, the costs of reapplying for benefits may be one
reason they do not stay on Food Stamps for very long. (Many states,
seeking to avoid fiscal penalties for payment error rates, require working
families to visit the Food Stamp office to reapply for benefits every
three months. In many cases, these families must provide substantial
documentation to verify their income and wages.)
- Although low Food Stamp participation rates among
welfare leavers has been a persistent problem, the evidence from the
evaluations suggests that the problem has not gotten worse as a result
of welfare reform. First, there were no big differences in patterns
of Food Stamp use between welfare leavers in the program groups in each
evaluation and those in the control groups. In fact, welfare leavers
in the program group in two of the programs were more likely to stay
on Food Stamps than those in the control group. Second, among the states
examined in this analysis, there is no strong evidence to suggest that
people who left welfare in the late 1990s were less likely to stay on
Food Stamps than those who left in the early 1990s. This finding, however,
is not conclusive since it is based on a few states and a few years
for each state. Finally, the data show rates of Food Stamp use fairly
consistent with those found in recent studies covering post-welfare
reform years. But while the low rate of Food Stamp use among welfare
leavers is not a new phenomenon, the recent fall in welfare caseloads
has contributed nonetheless to the drop in Food Stamp caseloads because
more and more families have moved from a group that has high rates of
Food Stamp use (welfare recipients) to a group that has lower rates
of Food Stamp use (the working poor).
- Findings from two welfare-to-work evaluations suggest
that increased interaction with case workers may help more families
gain access to Food Stamps as they leave welfare. Welfare leavers in
one program that offered integrated case management and those in another
that imposed time limits on receipt of welfare benefits were more likely
than their counterparts not subject to these programs to remain on Food
Stamps. One possible reason for the success of the time limit program
in assuring the continuation of Food Stamp benefits: Eligible welfare
leavers were given an exit interview, during which eligibility for continuation
of other benefits was assessed. These results should be interpreted
with caution, however, given that the groups being compared may have
differed in other ways that also contributed to their rates of Food
Stamp use.
- Among those who do not continue on Food Stamps
after leaving welfare, only about 30 percent had returned with a year.
Most Food Stamp returnees were also returning to welfare.
The findings highlight the need for strategies
to increase access to Food Stamps for eligible working families.
They suggest, too, that this could be done through increased
information and outreach to families leaving welfare, perhaps
through increased attention from caseworkers before and at
the point of the exit. The application and reapplication process
could be made less burdensome for families who have already
left welfare.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has recently
taken several steps designed to increase access to Food Stamps.
Among the new measures, states are now allowed to provide
families leaving welfare with up to three months of transitional
Food Stamp benefits. Similar "continuous eligibility"
provisions have been successful in increasing Medicaid enrollment
among eligible families leaving welfare. States have also
been given the option to reduce the frequency of income reporting
requirements for working families. The findings reinforce
those from a recent study of the implementation of welfare
reform in several large cities (Quint and Widom 2001) and
suggest that these new policies are a step in the right direction.
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