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News Release
  Release No. 0454.11
Contact:
Mary Reardon (202) 694-5136

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  USDA Invests in Research on Food and Nutrition Assistance Programs
 

WASHINGTON, October 21, 2011—Agriculture Under Secretary Dr. Catherine Woteki today announced new research grants and cooperative agreement awards in eight states and the District of Columbia designed to examine, evaluate, and enhance the U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) nutrition assistance programs.

"USDA is working every day to invest wisely and to make sure that our nutrition assistance programs are a bridge to success for hard-working Americans and their families," said Woteki. "By investing in research on nutrition programs, we can help maximize their effectiveness and efficiency, benefitting millions of Americans."

USDA continues to enhance nutrition program integrity and delivery even as demand has increased in response to national economic conditions. This year, USDA is investing in process improvement efforts that examine local office processes and identify and implement efficiencies. The department is also interested in funding projects that use technology to achieve procedural changes, such as document imaging, telephone interviews or Web-based access to case status information.

The grants and cooperative agreements will fund projects in California, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Massachusetts, Michigan, New York, South Carolina, Texas, and Utah. The projects will examine a number of program-related issues, including:

  • the effect of new food packages for the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children, or WIC, on the prevalence of breastfeeding;
  • the effect of switching to electronic benefits transfer (EBT) in WIC on benefit redemptions;
  • the effect of the new WIC food packages on participants' food choices;
  • beverage choices made by WIC participants;
  • the effect of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) on food choices;
  • how state program policies and local labor market conditions affect food assistance program participation; and
  • the impacts of food assistance programs on alternative methods of assessing poverty.

USDA's food and nutrition assistance programs—including SNAP, WIC, and the school meals programs—affect the lives of millions of people each day. About one in four Americans participates in at least one food assistance program at some point during the year.

The research projects are competitively awarded by USDA's Economic Research Service (ERS) through a publicly announced and peer-reviewed process. These competitive grants and cooperative agreements fund research on the relationships among food assistance programs, food choices, and the economy; and on using behavioral economics and incentives to promote child nutrition. The latter topic is part of an ongoing collaboration with USDA's Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) initiated in FY 2010 to develop a research program in behavioral economics as applied to USDA's child nutrition programs.

Following is a complete list of 2011 awards and recipients.

Food Assistance Programs, Food Choices, and the Economy

Dr. Theodore Joyce

Cambridge, MA

National Bureau of Economic Research

Effect of New WIC Food Packages on Breastfeeding and Food Package Choices

$198,000

Mr. Loren Bell

Ann Arbor, MI

Altarum Institute

An Examination of WIC Participant Redemption Patterns In Kentucky Prior to and After Implementation of Electronic Benefits Transfer

$176,000

Dr. Carol Spaulding

College Station, TX

Texas A&M University

Using the National Food and Nutrition Survey (NATFAN) to Examine WIC Participant Food Choices and Intakes Before and After Changes in the Food Benefit

$200,000

Dr. Tatiana Andreyeva

New Haven, CT

Yale University

The Economics of Beverage Choices among WIC and SNAP participants

$129,000

Dr. Tullaya Boonsaeng

Clemson, SC

Clemson University

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and Household Spending: A Flexible Demand System Approach

$105,000

Dr. Caroline Danielson

San Francisco, CA

Public Policy Institute of California

Local Area Determinants of Nutrition Assistance Program Caseloads

$221,000

Dr. Linda Giannarelli

Washington, DC

The Urban Institute

The Effect of Food Programs on Alternative Poverty Measures

$171,000

Using Behavioral Economics and Incentives to Promote Child Nutrition

Dr. David Just

Ithaca, NY

Cornell University

Cornell Center for Behavioral Economics in Child Nutrition Programs (additional funding)

$571,000

Dr. Joseph Price

Provo, UT

Brigham Young University

Using Nudges and Incentives to Promote Long-Run Consumption of Fruits and Vegetables in Children

$244,000

Dr. Gregory Madden

Logan, UT

Utah State University

Long-term Effects of Incentivizing Fruit and Vegetable Consumption

$155,000

* Rounded to nearest 1,000.

Further information is available on the Web at www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/FoodNutritionAssistance/Compgrants.htm, or from program contact David Smallwood at (202) 694-5466 or dsmallwd@ers.usda.gov .

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