Santa Fe New Mexican

Vast expansion in aid kept food insecurity in check amid pandemic

- By Jason Deparle

Despite the sudden loss of 20 million jobs at the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic, food insecurity among Americans remained unchanged last year, the government reported Wednesday, in what researcher­s called a testament to a vast expansion of government aid.

As lines outside food banks stretched for miles in March 2020, experts feared the country faced a looming hunger crisis. But bipartisan legislatio­n signed by former President Donald Trump offered billions in emergency aid, forestalli­ng the expected rise in hunger that has accompanie­d past recessions and keeping levels of hardship flat.

“This is huge news; it shows you much of a buffer we had from an expanded safety net,” said Elaine Waxman, who researches hunger at the Urban Institute in Washington. “There was no scenario in March of 2020 where I thought food insecurity would stay flat for the year. The fact that it did is extraordin­ary.”

The government found that 10.5 percent of U.S. households were food insecure, meaning at some point in the year they had difficulty providing enough food to all members of the home because of a lack of money. It also found that 3.9 percent had “very low food insecurity,” meaning the lack of resources caused them to reduce their food intake. That was statistica­lly unchanged from the previous year.

Food insecurity did rise among some groups, including households with children, Black Americans and households in the South. The gap between Black and white households, which was already large, widened further, with 21.7 percent of Black households experienci­ng food insecurity, compared with 7.1 percent of white households. That is a gap of 14.6 percentage points, up from 11.2 points in 2019, before the pandemic struck.

Black households suffered disproport­ionately from pandemic-era job loss and had fewer assets with which to buffer a crisis.

Still, the overall pattern of constraini­ng the effects on hunger contrasted sharply with the country’s experience during 2008, when nearly 13 million additional Americans became food insecure at the start of the Great Recession. Last year, 38.3 million Americans were food insecure, a level far below the 50.2 million food-insecure Americans at the Great Recession’s peak.

With President Joe Biden pushing a $3.5 trillion legislativ­e program that would further expand the safety net, the report from the Agricultur­e Department on Wednesday provided fodder for both sides. Supporters say it shows the value of expanded government spending, while critics say the unchanged rates of food hardship show further spending is not necessary.

The program expansions reflected in the report, such as the first round of stimulus checks and unemployme­nt expansions, occurred early in the pandemic. But several large subsequent rounds of aid have followed, most recently in a $1.9 trillion spending package in March that, among other things, offered monthly cash payments to nearly all families with children.

“A lot of us warned that those further expansions were unnecessar­y, and this provides additional support that that was true,” said Angela Rachidi, a hunger expert at the American Enterprise Institute. She warned that progressiv­es were pushing a narrative of exaggerate­d hardship to justify continued spending increases.

 ?? JIM WILSON/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Volunteers prepare boxes at a food bank in San Mateo, Calif., last month. The government reported Wednesday that food insecurity among Americans remained unchanged last year.
JIM WILSON/NEW YORK TIMES Volunteers prepare boxes at a food bank in San Mateo, Calif., last month. The government reported Wednesday that food insecurity among Americans remained unchanged last year.

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