Project:
Food Stamp Program Participation of Refugees and Immigrants: Measurement Error Correction for Immigrant Status
Year: 2002
Research Center: Institute for Research on Poverty, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Investigator: Bollinger, Chris, and Paul Hagstrom
Institution: University of Kentucky
Project Contact:
Chris Bollinger
University of Kentucky
Department of Economics
Lexington, KY 40506
crboll@pop.uky.edu
Summary:
After two decades of increasing participation in cash
and noncash public assistance programs by immigrant
households, the Personal Responsibility and Work
Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) of 1996
drastically altered the availability of Federal public
assistance to legal immigrants. Immigrants who were
not yet naturalized by 1996 or who entered the country
after August 1996 became ineligible for Federal benefits,
although States had the option to provide them
with cash assistance or Medicaid benefits. Refugees,
however, were given a 5-year exemption from the
eligibility restrictions on Federal benefits that applied
to other legal immigrants. Despite the exemption,
since 1996, the participation rate of refugees in public
assistance programs, such as the Food Stamp Program
(FSP), has fallen at least as fast as for other foreign-born
residents. FSP participation of refugees fell 37
percent between 1994 and 1997. During the same
period, participation in the FSP dropped 30 percent for
immigrants and 21 percent for native-born citizens.
The authors used the Current Population Survey to
estimate the impact of refugee status on FSP participation
from 1994 to 2001 and estimated the effect of
PRWORA on FSP participation of refugees. They
corrected for errors in the measurement of refugee status
and for the misreporting of FSP participation, which
allowed them to get consistent estimates of the effect
of refugee status and PRWORA on FSP participation.
The study found that refugees and non-refugee immigrants
have distinct patterns of FSP participation.
Refugees are more likely than other immigrants to use
food stamps near the time of their arrival in the U.S.
However, the FSP participation rate of refugees
declines with the number of years since their arrival in
the U.S., whereas this decline does not occur among
non-refugee immigrants. The FSP participation rate of
refugees is more sensitive to the economic climate
than that of other immigrants or of U.S. citizens. The
authors also found differences in program use by citizenship
status. Immigrants who opt for citizenship are
more likely to participate in welfare programs than
those who do not.
Even though FSP participation fell 37 percent between
1994 and 1997, welfare reform does not appear to
have had the unintended consequence of reducing FSP
participation among refugees. The study results
suggest that food stamp use among refugees is primarily
explained by their response to favorable economic
conditions, rather than to welfare reform.
The authors found that the usual approach to measuring
refugee status leads to a substantial underestimate
of the effect of refugee status on participation in
the FSP. Additionally, the failure to account for
response error in program participation causes an
underestimate of the effects of all variables on
participation. The methods used in this study can be
applied in research on program participation, to
correct for these measurement problems and to
ensure that research findings will be useful to policy
analysis.