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Characteristics
of Food Stamp Households: Fiscal
Year 2001
SUMMARY
On average,
about 17.3 million people living in 7.5
million households received food stamps
in the United States each month in FY
2001. Food stamp households are a
diverse group. Because food stamps are
available to most low-income households
with few resources, regardless of age,
disability status, or family structure,
recipients represent a broad
cross-section of the nation's poor. This
report provides summary information
about the demographic and economic
circumstances of food stamp households.
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Most
food stamp recipients are children
or elderly. Over half (51 percent)
are children and another 10 percent
are age 60 or older. Working-age
women represent 28 percent of the
caseload, while working-age men
represent 12 percent.
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The
majority of food stamp households do
not receive cash welfare benefits.
Less than one quarter (23 percent)
received TANF benefits. Nearly a
third (32 percent) received
Supplemental Security Income. One
quarter received Social Security
benefits. Nine percent had no cash
income of any kind.
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Many
food stamp recipients work. Over
one-fourth (27 percent) of food
stamp households have earnings. For
these households, earnings are the
primary source of income.
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Food
stamp households have little income.
Only 11 percent are above the
poverty line, while 34 percent have
incomes at or below half the poverty
line. The typical food stamp
household had gross income of $624
per month and received a monthly
food stamp benefit of $163. Over
one-fifth of monthly funds (cash
income plus food stamps) available
to a typical household come from
food stamps.
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Food
stamp households possess few
resources. The average food stamp
household possesses only about $148
in countable resources (including
the non-excluded portion of vehicles
and the entire value of checking and
savings accounts and other savings).
Over two-thirds (68 percent) have no
countable resources.
Most food stamp
households are small. The average food
stamp household size was 2.3, but varied
considerably by household composition.
Households with children were relatively
large, averaging 3.4 members. Households
with elderly members tended to be
smaller, with an average size of 1.3
people.
January
2003
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