Cuffey Joel, Beatty Timothy Km, Harnack Lisa
1Department of Applied Economics,University of Minnesota - Twin Cities,1994 Buford Avenue,St. Paul,MN 55108,USA.
2Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics,University of California - Davis,2116 Social Sciences and Humanities,Davis CA,USA.
Public Health Nutr. 2016 Dec;19(17):3216-3231. doi: 10.1017/S1368980015003511. Epub 2015 Dec 9.
To systematically review the potential impact of reducing the set of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)-eligible foods (e.g. not allowing purchase of sugar-sweetened beverages with SNAP benefits) on expenditures for restricted foods.
The impact on food expenditures of a $US 1 reduction in available SNAP benefits can be used to estimate the impact of restrictions on SNAP-eligible foods. An electronic search of EconPapers, AgEcon Search, EconLit, WorldCat, ProQuest Dissertations and Theses, PubMed and NALDC, and a snowball search were conducted to obtain a sample of studies up to March 2015 that estimate the impacts of SNAP and other income on household food expenditures. The studies were classified according to study population, study design and whether they attempted to correct for major study design biases.
Estimates were extracted from fifty-nine published and unpublished studies.
US households.
Fifty-nine studies were found, yielding 123 estimates of the impact of SNAP benefits on food expenditures and 117 estimates of the difference in impacts between SNAP benefits and other income. Studies correcting for or mitigating study design biases had less estimate variation. Estimates indicate that expenditures on the restricted item would decrease by $US 1·6 to $US 4·8 if $US 10 of SNAP benefits would have otherwise been spent, with a median overall impact of $US 3.
The present literature suggests that restrictions on SNAP-eligible items may result in a small but potentially meaningful decrease in SNAP expenditures for restricted items. Further research is needed to evaluate whether this would translate into improvements in diet quality.
系统评价减少补充营养援助计划(SNAP)合格食品种类(例如不允许用SNAP福利购买含糖饮料)对受限食品支出的潜在影响。
SNAP福利每减少1美元对食品支出的影响可用于估计对SNAP合格食品限制的影响。对EconPapers、AgEcon Search、EconLit、WorldCat、ProQuest学位论文数据库以及PubMed和NALDC进行电子检索,并进行滚雪球式搜索,以获取截至2015年3月估计SNAP及其他收入对家庭食品支出影响的研究样本。这些研究根据研究人群、研究设计以及是否试图纠正主要研究设计偏差进行分类。
从59项已发表和未发表的研究中提取估计值。
美国家庭。
共找到59项研究,得出123个关于SNAP福利对食品支出影响的估计值,以及117个关于SNAP福利与其他收入影响差异的估计值。纠正或减轻研究设计偏差的研究估计值差异较小。估计表明,如果原本会花10美元的SNAP福利,受限商品的支出将减少1.6美元至4.8美元,总体影响中位数为3美元。
现有文献表明,对SNAP合格商品的限制可能会使受限商品的SNAP支出有小幅但可能有意义的减少。需要进一步研究来评估这是否会转化为饮食质量的改善。