| Program
Design and Operations |
WIC and the Economics of Infant Formula Contracts, Rebates, and Wholesale
Prices
David Betson
University of Notre Dame. Notre Dame, IN
Federal law requires that WIC State agencies have competitively-bid infant
formula rebate contracts with formula manufacturers. In 2001, such rebates
totaled almost $1.6 billion. The amount of the rebates is not uniform
across States—they currently range from 85 percent to 98 percent
of the wholesale price of infant formula. This study will examine the
factors causing the variations in WIC rebates across States and time,
and determine whether the WIC rebate program affects the wholesale price
of infant formula.
Cooperative Research Agreement: $70,000
Food Stamp Use by Legal Immigrants Before and After
the 2003 Restorations
Jeffrey Passel
The Urban Institute. Washington, DC
This project will examine the food stamp participation rate of immigrant
households following the 2002 Farm Bill’s restoration of benefits
to noncitizens; determine how and why immigrant household participation
rates vary by State; examine how immigrant household participation rates
differ from other eligible populations; and identify vulnerable eligible
immigrant subpopulations who may not be participating in the Food Stamp
Program.
Grant: $200,000
Simulating Program Costs and Participation Under
the Farm Bill and Alternative Food Assistance Policies
Thomas MaCurdy
The SPHERE Institute. Burlingame, CA
This study will examine key Food Stamp Program provisions from the 2002
Farm Bill, using a Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP)-based
microsimulation model. Impacts on participation and benefit levels will
be projected for those Farm Bill provisions allowing for simplified reporting,
transitional food stamps for families leaving cash welfare, and partial
restoration of benefits to legal immigrants. Cost impacts of simplified
reporting options will be simulated. Modifications to the model will enhance
its reliability and refine its capacity to simulate consequences of alternative
reporting policies in the National School Lunch Program.
Cooperative Research Agreement: $140,000
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| Food
Assistance as a Safety Net |
Food Stamps, Food Insecurity and Expenditures: A Simultaneous Equation
System
Steven Yen
University of Tennessee. Knoxville, TN
This project will examine the relationships among Food Stamp Program
participation, food insecurity, and food expenditures. Using data from
the 1996-97 National Food Stamp Program Survey, the project will develop
an econometric model to address sample selection bias and interrelated
decision making.
Cooperative Research Agreement: $70,000
Employment, Home Meal Production, Food Spending, and
Food Security in Food Stamp Households
Donald Rose
Tulane University. New Orleans, LA
To better understand the at-home meal production process in low-income
households, this study will examine the time inputs required for home
meal production and the trade-offs between time and food costs, particularly
for low-income households, using data from the 1996-97 National Food Stamp
Program Survey. The labor force participation of the household meal preparer
will also be examined as a factor influencing food spending and household
food security using data from the Food Security Supplement to the Current
Population Survey (CPS).
Assistance Type Cooperative Agreement: $136,000
Sources of Variation in State Food Stamp Participation
Rates
Allen Schirm
Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. Princeton, NJ
This project will identify the factors that lead to variation in State
Food Stamp Program participation rates. Some States serve fewer than half
of the eligible population and others serve more than three-quarters.
Multivariate techniques will be used to estimate the extent to which State
differences in program policies, economic conditions, and characteristics
of eligible households affect participation rates.
Assistance Type Cooperative Agreement: $202,000
A Study of Locality, Agency, and Individual Characteristics
Affecting Food Stamp Program Participation in Virginia
Carol Baron
Virginia Department of Social Services. Richmond, VA
This project will analyze factors associated with the wide variation
of Food Stamp Program participation rates across the Commonwealth of Virginia.
The project will create a local area database as well as a linked administrative
database to characterize localities, individuals, and/or households. Statistical
analysis will quantify the relationship among local, individual, and agency
characteristics, and identify facilitators and barriers to Food Stamp
Program participation.
Cooperative Research Agreement: $80,000
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| Obesity,
Diet Quality, and Health |
Modifying Effects of Participation in Food Assistance Programs on
the Obesity, Health, and Well-Being of Adults
Sonya Jones
University of Tennessee. Knoxville, TN
This project seeks to develop a better understanding of how food security
and participation in food assistance programs affect client’s well-being.
This study will use longitudinal data from Panel Study of Income Dynamics
to examine, in a sample of adult men and women, the causal direction of
the relationships among food insecurity, obesity, and other measures of
health status and well-being, and test for the modifying effect of household
participation in TANF, the Food Stamp Program, and WIC.
Cooperative Research Agreement: $67,431
Modifying Effects of Participation in Food Assistance
Programs on the Weight Status, Health, Development, and Well-Being of
Children
Edward Frongillo, Jr.
Cornell University. Ithaca, NY
This project seeks to develop a better understanding of how food security
and participation in food assistance programs affect children’s
well-being. This study will make use of longitudinal data from the Early
Childhood Longitudinal Study, Kindergarten Class of 1998-99, to examine,
in a sample of elementary-aged children, the causal direction of the relationships
among food insecurity, overweight, and other measures of child development
and well-being, and test for the modifying effect of participation in
TANF, the Food Stamp Program, the National School Lunch and Breakfast
Program, and past participation in WIC and Head Start.
Cooperative Research Agreement: $67,066
Food Prices and Availability and Children's Health
and Developmental Outcomes
Roland Sturm
RAND. Santa Monica, CA
Childhood overweight has been increasing at an alarming rate over the
past several decades. This study will examine the association between
obesity and children’s academic and developmental outcomes in elementary
school; examine the association between neighborhood characteristics,
especially the supply of groceries and food price levels, and childhood
obesity; and simulate the impact of changes in neighborhood food price
and availability on children's outcomes. The study will use data from
the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Class 1998-1999,
a nationally representative data set that follows a cohort of children
from kindergarten through fifth grade.
Grant: $174,897
Methodology to Evaluate Effects of Team Nutrition
Program in Schools
Mary Murimi
Louisiana Tech University. Ruston, LA
USDA created the Team Nutrition Program to improve children’s eating
and physical activity habits through nutrition education. This project
will develop a methodology to assess level of implementation of the Team
Nutrition Program, and examine the feasibility of a web-based survey as
a data collection mechanism.
Cooperative Research Agreement: $25,000
Food Sufficiency, Food Stamp Program Participation
and the Health of the Elderly
Christine Ranney
Cornell University. Ithaca, NY
This study will examine the relationships among participation in the
Food Stamp Program, food sufficiency, and health of the elderly in the
United States using panel data from the Health and Retirement Survey.
Econometric techniques will be used to develop a better understanding
of the simultaneous interactions among these three factors. Findings may
aid in planning policy interventions to improve the well-being of this
vulnerable age group as they become a larger share of the population.
Cooperative Research Agreement: $80,000
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