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Food Assistance and Nutrition Programs: FANRP

Contents
 
Contents
 

This page provides the following information:

The Food Assistance and Nutrition Research Program (FANRP) at ERS addresses research issues associated with the Nation’s food assistance and nutrition programs, including the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program—SNAP (formerly the Food Stamp Program); the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Woman, Infants, and Children (WIC); and the Child Nutrition Programs. FANRP’s research is designed to meet critical needs of USDA, Congress, program managers and participants, the research community, and the public at large. Our goal is a high-quality, multidisciplinary program that supports “economic research that informs food and nutrition assistance policy.”

For an overview of FANRP activities during the year, see Food Assistance and Nutrition Research Program, Final Report: Fiscal 2010 Activities.

FANRP research is conducted both within ERS and outside of ERS. Internal research uses ERS’s research capital and specialized knowledge base. Extramural research, often conducted jointly with ERS staff, draws upon the multidisciplinary expertise of outside researchers and the resources of numerous institutions and universities across the country. See the ERS electronic database of peer-reviewed reports and articles based on FANRP-supported research published at ERS and elsewhere.

FANRP uses a variety of funding mechanisms in its extramural programs:

  • Contracts are used when a very specific product is required, such as collection of data.

  • Competitive grants and cooperative agreements are used when the intent is to stimulate new and innovative research or to undertake projects conducted jointly with ERS researchers.

  • Interagency agreements are used to enhance food assistance data development through cost-sharing partnerships and to fund cooperative interagency research on program interactions and policy issues. See the ERS elecontric database of projects:

FANRP also supports extramural research through the RIDGE Program which seeks to:

  • stimulate new and innovative research on food assistance and nutrition issues

  • broaden the participation of social science scholars in these issues. See the ERS electronic database of RIDGE Projects and Summaries.

Research ThemesMother and child with an Intake Worker

FANRP recognizes the importance of adopting a multi-program view rather than restricting research to an individual program-by-program approach; for example, cross-program interactions between SNAP/FSP, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), and Medicaid are important. FANRP’s research is less targeted to specific operational details of programs. Instead, research is oriented more toward core policy issues, such as the overall success of the package of food assistance and nutrition programs in terms of diet and health outcomes, program coverage, gaps and overlap between programs, and outcome-based performance for the target population.

The three overarching themes of FANRP are:

  • Program Outcomes and Economic Well-Being of Participants—Studies how the programs influence economic well-being and enhance access to and choices of palatable, nutritious, and healthy diets.

  • Program Access and Economic Determinations of Participation—Gauges the success of programs aimed at needy, at-risk population groups and examines program gaps and overlaps; differences between rural and urban delivery; outreach; waste, fraud, and abuse; commodity procurement and distribution; public and private partnerships; and alternative ways to deliver benefits.

  • Program Dynamics and Efficiency—Focuses on how program needs change with local labor market conditions, economic growth, recession, and inflation in food prices and the general economy, and how changing State welfare programs interact with food and nutrition programs.2007 Food Assistance and Nutrition Research Conference

Within these general themes, the topic areas for upcoming research are determined annually. ERS holds annual priority-identification conferences to listen to the interests and concerns of many experts and to help establish topic areas for upcoming research.

The priority research areas for fiscal 2010 were:

  • Food Assistance and Children's Well-Being
  • Interactions Between the Built Environment and Food Assistance Programs
  • Using Behavioral Economics and Incentives to Promote Child Nutrition

The competitive grants and cooperative agreements for the year incorporate the above research areas, supplemented by the RIDGE Program with its site-specific research agendas.

FANRP Activities

FANRP funds a portfolio of extramural research, including grants, cooperative agreements, and contracts that are competitively awarded through a tightly run peer review process. The publication Food Assistance and Nutrition Research Program, Final Report: Fiscal 2010 Activities provides an overview of FANRP's research themes, principles, publications, and activities and describes the objectives of individual research projects.

Studies conducted by ERS staff are an integral part of the FANRP program. An internal study can have rapid turnaround from project conception to delivery and monitor sensitive policy issues. Interagency agreements and cooperative agreements enable ERS staff to supplement their own expertise with the knowledge and resources of other government agencies and academic institutions. The diverse backgrounds of ERS staff enable the agency to adopt interdisciplinary or discipline-specific approaches, as warranted by each research topic.

A key objective of FANRP is supporting research that provides policymakers with information to improve food and nutrition assistance programs. FANRP has conducted a number of congressionally mandated studies. For example, in fiscal 2008, Congress asked USDA to study food deserts—areas with limited access to affordable and nutritious foods, particularly low-income communities. The resulting report—Access to Affordable and Nutritious Food—Measuring and Understanding Food Deserts and Their Consequences: Report to Congress—summarizes findings of a national-level assessment of the extent and characteristics of food deserts, analysis of the consequences of food deserts, lessons learned from related federal programs, and a dscussion of policy options for alleviating the effects of food deserts.

Program PrinciplesTwo little girls at day care

The program principles upon which FANRP is built ensure the reliability and usefulness of the research.

  • Research that meets the needs of all stakeholders—program participants, USDA, Congress, and the public.
  • Integrated, comprehensive program that conducts research in the broader context of current and future economic and social environments.
  • Broad array of public and private entities directly involved in research, evaluation, and review efforts.
  • Integration of ERS staff expertise in the development, implementation, and accomplishment of research projects.
  • Scientifically rigorous studies and evaluations with verifiable and unbiased results.
  • Rigorous internal and external review of research results.
  • Public availability of data.
  • Wide distribution of research findings.
  • Development and maintenance of continuous data sets.

 

For more information, contact: Victor Oliveira

Web administration: webadmin@ers.usda.gov

Updated date: January 31, 2011