Hunger crisis looming
This editorial appeared in The Washington Post. T he novel coronavirus has triggered a spike in food insecurity among Americans. Though many groups are racing to feed their neighbors with creative and generous efforts, they cannot possibly meet the staggering need that is already three times as severe as during the worst of the Great Recession, by some measures. In the next coronavirus legislation, Congress must address the unfolding hunger crisis. New data shows that early predictions of coronavirus-inflicted hunger are coming true, disproportionately affecting communities of color. Food insecurity occurs in a household when a lack of resources leads to limited or uncertain access to enough food. A recent Brookings Institution survey found that more than 1 in 5 U.S. households were food insecure at the end of April.
The picture for young children is particularly frightening: Food insecurity affected an astonishing 40.9% of households of mothers with children age 12 and under. Food insecurity in children can contribute to toxic stress, which can negatively impact brain development and increase the risk of depression, anxiety and substance abuse later in life.
Hunger is avoidable.
Congress took a number of anti-hunger steps in March, including a temporary suspension of certain program requirements for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), that would have been impractical in a pandemic. SNAP provides food assistance to about 40 million low-income Americans. Congress also authorized the Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer (P-EBT) program to help families of children eligible for free or reduced school meals to access the value of those meals amid school closures.
These were good early steps, but the specter of hunger is now worse than many imagined. Congress should boost maximum SNAP benefits by 15%, as it did during the Great Recession, and increase the minimum benefit. Congress should extend P-EBT into the summer, and as long as school closures interrupt access to breakfast and lunch. Most important, snapbacks in benefits should be tied to economic indicators, rather than the public health emergency, as the economic crisis will likely outlast the pandemic.
The grim prospect of a hunger crisis looms large around the world. The United States has the means and policy infrastructure to avoid such devastating trade-offs. Do we have the political will?