Food Stamps
Food stamps are coupons redeemable in food at grocery stores.
The government allots food stamps to low-income families to assure that minimal
nutritional needs are met. Because they are redeemable in food, food stamps have
circulated as money in ghetto areas. Although the food stamp program is a federal program, supervised by the United States
Department of Agriculture, the process of identifying qualified families and
issuing food stamps is left to the individual state governments.
The first food stamp program grew out of the contradictions of the Great
Depression of the 1930s in which agricultural surpluses mocked the problems of
rising unemployment, hunger, destitution, and falling farm incomes. The
government’s initial response of destroying agricultural commodities seemed
unreasonable in light of growing poverty and hunger. The first food stamp
program began in 1939 and continued until 1943 when the wartime boom had solved
the unemployment problem, and agricultural surpluses were no longer
accumulating.
The food stamp program was revived in the 1960s, partly because President
Kennedy, when campaigning in West Virginia, had observed schoolchildren taking
home leftovers from school lunches. Various pilot programs were put into
operation until Congress enacted the Food Stamp Program Act of 1964. Later in
the 1960s and early 1970s Congress increased the benefits and eased the
eligibility requirements. At first food stamp recipients had to pay for the
stamps, but in the 1970s the stamps became free.
To qualify for food stamps families must fall below certain income levels,
after allowances are made for housing costs, childcare, etc. The lower a
family’s income, the more food stamps the family can receive.
In the 1970s and early 1980s food stamps became a sort of second-class
currency in low-income neighborhoods. Although food stamps could legally be used
only to purchase food, some merchants fudged and sold alcohol and other grocery
store items for food stamps. On the streets food stamps are traded for cash, but
at steep discounts. Individuals traded food stamps for cash and used the cash to
purchase items that could not be purchased with food stamps.
Partly because of the fraudulent use of food stamps, the federal government
during the Reagan years cut back on food stamp expenditures. The program
remained in place, however, and the 1990s saw many states implement electronic
benefit transfer programs that substituted a debit card for coupons. The use of
the cards requires identification, rendering the transfer of food stamp benefits
to parties other than the cardholder almost impossible. By 2002 all states are
expected to have electronic benefit transfers.
Given that food items such as livestock, rice, corn, and many others have
historically emerged as mediums of exchange, it should not be surprising that
coupons redeemable in food should began to wear the aspect of money and
circulate accordingly. Presumably, food stamp money will disappear in time
because it involves an illegal use of food stamps, and the government will work
to improve its regulation of the program.
No comments:
Post a Comment