SNAP and Food Expenditures: Evaluating California's Cash-out Policy

Abstract

This paper investigates how Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) eligibility affects food expenditures. A 2019 policy change in California granted SNAP eligibility to previously ineligible Supplemental Security Income (SSI) recipients. Using the Consumer Expenditure Survey, we find that after the policy change, affected SSI recipients increased their “food at home” budget share between 2.5 and 4.3 percentage points ($120 to $206 per quarter). The SNAP effect on total food expenditures is dampened by a decrease in “food away from home” which SNAP benefits cannot be spent on.

Publication
Contemporary Economic Policy
Shogher Ohannessian
Shogher Ohannessian
Researcher

Shogher Ohannessian is a Researcher at the California Policy Lab at UCLA, working on a diverse array of labor, safety-net, and homelessness projects.