Project:
Food Stamp Dynamics Across Rural and Urban Landscapes in the Era of Welfare Reform
Year: 2001
Research Center: Southern Rural Development Center, Mississippi State University
Investigator: Parisi, Domenico, Duane A. Gill, Steven Michael Grice, Michael Taquino, and Deborah Harris
Institution: Social Science Research Center, Mississippi State University
Project Contact:
Domenico Parisi, Assistant Professor
Mississippi State University
P.O. Box 5287
Mississippi State, MS 39762-5287
Phone: 662-325-8065
mimmo.parisi@ssrc.msstate.edu
Summary:
Welfare reform has encouraged researchers to develop
new conceptual and empirical frameworks for examining
low-income populations. The authors extend
previous research by integrating into a single model
the influence of individual, place, and geographic-setting
characteristics on Food Stamp Program (FSP)
participation dynamics. They tested whether local
resources influence the dynamics of FSP participation.
They also gauged the effect of spatial inequality, in
terms of economic resources and social resources,
across rural and urban populations.
The authors estimate that FSP recipients who exited
the program were most likely to do so between the 1st
and 13th months following passage of the 1996
Welfare Reform Act. The probability of exit leveled
off by the end of the second year after the passage of
the welfare reform legislation.
The authors used logistic regression analysis to estimate
the effect of individual and community characteristics
on the probability that an individual stopped
receiving food stamps during the year after passage of
the welfare reform legislation. The community characteristics
included as explanatory variables in the
regression analysis were measures of local labor
market conditions, measures of civic capacity (such as
the number of churches per person), and indexes that
measure how active local organizations are in
addressing issues such as poverty and unemployment.
They also examined the variation in the probability of
exiting the FSP across metropolitan and nonmetropolitan
regions of Mississippi.
The estimation results indicated that Whites were more
likely to stop receiving food stamps than African-
Americans and that households without children were
more likely to stop receiving food stamps than those
with children. The community characteristics with the
largest estimated effect on the probability of individuals
leaving the FSP were the indexes of community
activity in addressing local issues. Individuals in
communities with organizations that focus on job
promotion and with churches actively engaged in local
issues were more likely to exit the FSP than individuals
in communities without those organizations. In
addition, FSP recipients in nonmetropolitan regions
were less likely to exit the program than those in
metropolitan regions, and those in the Delta region
were the least likely to exit the program.
The authors conclude that individual and community
characteristics are important factors to predict exit
from the FSP. They suggest that future research focus
on the extent to which policies resulting from welfare
reform legislation affect declines in Food Stamp
Program participation at the community level.