Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Less Poverty Or Less Hunger?
Less Poverty Or Less Hunger?
Sep 8, 2025 5:34 PM

The U.S. government food stamp program, better known as SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) is being credited for “alleviating poverty” as the government releases statistics for 2012.

SNAP plays a crucial, but often underappreciated, role in alleviating poverty,” said Stacy Dean, an expert on the program with the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington-based research group that focuses on social programs and budget policy.

The Washington Post goes so far as to say “4 million more people would be poor” if it weren’t for SNAP.

I’m not an economist, but I’m puzzled by this. As I see it, SNAP may add to a family’s e” and if one is counting poverty statistics that way, I can see the point. But people who use SNAP aren’t less poor; they are just less hungry. Is that really lifting people out of poverty? Of course not.

Kevin W. Concannon, the under secretary of agriculture for food, nutrition and consumer services, even though he touts SNAP as being helpful, has to backtrack on the government’s claim of “alleviating poverty”:

Even if SNAP doesn’t have the effect of lifting someone out of poverty, it moves them further up,” Mr. Concannon said.

He doesn’t say what “further up” means, though.

The Washington Post is in the same muddle: “That doesn’t mean they’re not still poor, of course, but it can sure help to not have to worry about going hungry all the time.”

Shouldn’t we be talking about “poverty alleviation” in terms of people being able to feed themselves and their families without government assistance? Shouldn’t poverty alleviation be about the creation of jobs and a personal e that sustains families? es to mind is the vision promoted by PovertyCure:

When we put the person at the center of our economic thinking, we transform the way we look at wealth and poverty. Instead of asking what causes poverty, we begin to ask, what causes wealth? What are the conditions for human flourishing from which prosperity can grow? And how can we create and protect the space for people to live out their freedom and responsibilities?

It’s disingenuous to claim that 4 million people have been lifted from poverty due to SNAP. SNAP doesn’t lessen poverty; it lessens hunger. That’s a good thing, but a better thing is wealth creation and human flourishing.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Academic Journals in the ‘Network’ Economy
John Hartley, the founder and editor of the International Journal of Cultural Studies, does for that journal something like what I did for the Journal of Markets & Morality awhile back. He takes his experience as an editor to reflect on the current state of the scholarly journal amid the challenges and opportunities in the digital age. Hartley opens his study, “Lament for a Lost Running Order? Obsolescence and Academic Journals,” by concluding that “the academic journal is obsolete,” at...
Card Check Gets Checked at the Senate’s Doors
This morning, the New York Times reported that a broad bipartisan effort of senators convinced Democratic leadership to drop provisions in the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) that would have weakened the right of workers to hold secret ballot elections to determine whether or not they would unionize. EFCA had e known by many of its opponents as the “card check bill” because of its central proposal: if over half of workers at a firm signed cards authorizing a union...
Primacy of Culture in Caritas in Veritate
Zenit published my article on the pope’s new social encyclical: Encyclical Offers Opportunity to “Think With the Church” By Jennifer Roback Morse SAN MARCOS, California, JULY 17, 2009 (Zenit.org).- Benedict XVI’s “Caritas in Veritate” is his contribution to the course of Catholic social teaching. mentators seem to read this document as if it were a think-tank white paper, and ask whether the Pope endorses their particular policy preferences. I must say that I surprised myself by not reflexively reading it...
Relevant Radio: Rev. Sirico On Caritas in Veritate
Rev. Robert A. Sirico had two recent appearances on Relevant Radio’s Drew Mariani Show to discuss the new social encyclical from Pope Benedict XVI. His first appearance was prior to the release of the encyclical and he explained how Christians who support the free economy believe that it should not be based on greed. To have a just society, we must have just people. When money es the end of a person, and a person’s whole life is directed to...
The World of Work
In the July 22 Wall Street Journal, the editorial staff takes off on Congress for “bashing career colleges.” As a recruiter focusing primarily on manufacturing industries — where machines pound, pour, slit, weld, paint and deliver what the public demands and the guys up front have been able to book — I’ve noticed an increased lack of capable and eager young people for both the jobs on the shop floor and the ones in engineering. The WSJ article suggests that...
Zero-Sum: The Most Dangerous Game
A recent Fox News piece on President Obama’s “science czar,” John Holdren, makes for spooky reading, dramatizing where well-intended intellectuals can end up when they take a zero-sum view of our planet’s resources. Read More… A recent Fox News piece on President Obama’s “science czar,” John Holdren, makes for spooky reading, dramatizing where well-intended intellectuals can end up when they take a zero-sum view of our planet’s resources. In a 1977 course book that Holdren co-authored with environmental activists Paul...
Townhall: Jayabalan Talks About Caritas in Veritate
Kathryn Lopez, editor of National Review Online, has a column on Caritas in Veritate titled, “Liberal Catholics Can’t Handle the Truth.” Lopez looks at mentary on Caritas in Veritate, especially by the left, and shows why the encyclical should not be politicized. The encyclical is about truth, which can not be bent to advance a political agenda, she asserts. Kishore Jayabalan, director of Acton’s Rome office, was also quoted in Lopez’s article: Neither side . . . seems ready to...
Developing the Ius Digitus
The ius gentium, or law of nations, has an important place in legal history. Variously conceived, the law of nations often referred to the code of conduct for dealing with foreign peoples according to their own local, national, or regional standards. As a form of natural law, the ius gentium has often been appealed to as a basis for determining what has been believed everywhere, always, by everyone. It’s an approach used, for instance, with some qualification by C.S. Lewis...
Sowell and Benedict XVI on Economics and Culture
Back in 1983, economist Thomas Sowell wrote The Economics and Politics of Race, an in-depth look at how different ethnic and immigrant groups fared in different countries throughout human history. He noted that some groups, like the overseas Chinese, Japanese, and Jews, tended to thrive economically no matter where they went, bringing new skills to the countries that they arrived in and often achieving social acceptance even after facing considerable hatred and violence. Other groups, like the Irish and the...
Lunar Landing Marks Great Era of Discovery
Today marks the 40th Anniversary of the one of the greatest feats of human exploration, courage and innovation: man’s setting foot on the surface of the moon. Responding heroically to the challenges of the “Space Race” (while its arch-nemesis, the Soviet Union, was clearly in the lead), the United States stood proud to represent the free and enterprising West. To put the challenges of victory into perspective, America was running adrift amid pretty rough waters at the time: two great...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved