Will the Government Shutdown Result in 'Hunger for Millions' as Reuters Claims?
When you use incorrect stats to bolster your claims, as Reuters did, all kinds of foolish conclusions follow.

"Biden, US officials warn of hunger for millions in a government shutdown," reads a Reuters headline from yesterday. The article details how Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack told reporters this week that the "vast majority" of the 7 million who receive benefits from the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program will see their benefits disappear after the government shuts down, which is likely to happen this Saturday at midnight due to congressional inability to approve spending bills.
"Nearly half of U.S. newborns rely on WIC, the USDA says," according to Reuters.
Just one problem: That's not true.
If you scroll down to Figure 6 on the Department of Agriculture's helpful site, you can input your state and see the current numbers as well as how those trends have changed over time. The "coverage rate"—the number who participate in the program, out of the total number who are eligible—hovers around roughly 50 percent. But half of U.S. newborns are not eligible for WIC in the first place, as it is a means-tested program designed to serve the poor, and half of newborns in the United States are not in poverty or close to it.
In my state of New York, for example, there were 1,449,500 children aged 0-4 and pregnant or postpartum women (all of whom would be theoretically eligible for WIC, if meeting the need requirement); of that total population, 48.7 percent would be eligible for the program (so about 706,000), and about half of that number ends up actually taking advantage of benefits (roughly 353,000).
For the record, other parts of the USDA's site partially contradict that panel of information. During fiscal year 2022 (which may have seen an uptick due to pandemic-related disruptions), WIC administered benefits to "an estimated 39 percent of all infants in the United States." This seems high to me given what we know about poverty statistics. It's hard to get a straight answer, even using the agency's own data and infographics. But one thing becomes clear: it is not true that half of U.S. newborns rely on this means-tested government program, which is what Reuters claimed (albeit with the handy hedge word nearly).
The official national poverty rate as of 2022 hovered at around 11.5 percent, per Census Bureau data. There are plenty of issues with how poverty gets measured in the U.S. As I wrote recently in Roundup:
Poverty in America is measured in two ways: via the Official Poverty Measure (OPM), which uses cash and cash-like government benefits (welfare and unemployment checks), and the Supplemental Poverty Measure (SPM), which factors in food stamps and tax credits. Depending on which measure you look at, you'll get a different sense of how dire (or not) the situation is. For example, stimulus checks, expanded food stamp benefits, and expanded child tax credits were counted only under the SPM (not the OPM). When they expired last year, the poverty rate (as counted by the SPM) rose.
But the buried lede in all of this trouble with counting is that there are actually a lot of programs designed to take care of the needs of the American poor. WIC, for example, tends to be available to those with "a family income of at or below 185 percent of the U.S. poverty level"; 37 percent of WIC recipients are also enrolled in Medicaid but not Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) or SNAP; 31 percent of WIC recipients used both Medicaid and SNAP but not TANF; 4 percent use all mentioned programs.
None of this is to downplay the hardships or indignities of poverty. Rather, it is important for news outlets to accurately report what is really happening on the ground so that we don't have a warped sense of the scale of the country's problems. If fully half of American infants are starving or in danger of it—and if that money will soon be pulled because Congress can't agree on appropriations bills—that would be a dire situation. Thankfully, that's not really what's happening, and there are generally multiple welfare programs that serve these groups at once.
Even if the government shuts down and WIC payments get temporarily suspended, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) will still continue to cut checks for the needy, at least for the entire month of October, for example. The longest government shutdown in history lasted for 34 days, so it's likely that SNAP would have enough runway to continue to administer benefits for the duration of the shutdown. Meanwhile, the Department of Housing and Urban Development says that it will continue to administer housing vouchers but that "the processing or closing of FHA-insured loans may be delayed."
In other words: some of the programs that poor people rely on to scrape by may be temporarily halted or skeletal in staffing, but basic necessities will, in some form, remain available. Media outlets and politicians looking to score points should not claim otherwise.
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When it comes time for the annual funding drive, is there a way we can contribute to individual authors?
what's his name would learn his Ranked Choice lesson.
Remember when "without evidence" was a thing?
and half of newborns in the United States are not in poverty or close to it.
This can't be true. Wingnut.com says that 70% of Americans are living paycheck to paycheck and cannot buy infant formula.
I mean you can be this dumb, but why choose to be this dumb?
Not every poor person has a child or newborn.
You moron, I'm mocking your idiot wingnut pals.
Except, to mock, you must ground it somewhere in reality. What you posted wasn't even close to reality. It was just retarded.
The other day in the baby formula comments JA tried to defend tariffs by saying over 50% of all babies get their food from WIC. So SBP's exaggerations aren't that far from what you guys say.
And here is an example of sarc lying. I never defended tariffs. I said tariffs weren’t the issue as the labeling requirements from the FDA were what stopped importation. Sarc even finally admitted I was right, but chooses to misrepresent the argument yet again.
I also stated the tariffs didn’t effect demand based on formula being a necessity and not a luxury good as well as there being no possible means to supply shift to other goods. But Sarc once again showed his ignorance of basic economics in the discussion.
Sarc, you know people can go reread the thread right?
Saying the tariffs are not the driver of the importation ban, an entirely accurate statement, is not defending the tariff. But again, as shown this morning, you’re too stupid to actually understand anything beyond a bumper sticker.
Ironically Liz even affirms my statement, putting WIC at 50%. So I was right yet again, disagreement on small amount of the percentage. And of course you don’t understand how WIC effected the number of domestic distributors and the importation laws due to it… so again you revel in your own ignorance.
Kudos for keeping up the demonstrations of your ignorance!
You didn't read the article. She says half of eligible people use the program.
And since you still didn't understand my argument against the tariffs you like so much, I will try to summarize (what you call simple thinking). The fact that price to consumers of imported baby formula is artificially increased 25% by the tariffs you are defending, it's not worth it for the producers to invest the money required to satisfy FDA labeling requirements. Remove the tax on consumers that you are defending, and producers likely would take on that expense. But as long as the price remains artificially high because of the tariff you are defending, they have no incentive to spend the money required for the new labels.
For someone who claims to be a certified expert in economics, you seem to have no understanding of incentives.
it’s not worth it for the producers to invest the money required to satisfy FDA labeling requirements.
And just like yesterday you disprove all of your prior arguments where you claim consumers pay the tax, not suppliers. LOL.
You skipped right over the fact it isn’t a luxury good. I even brought up the example of energy pricing to help you out. Good work continuing to ignore basic premises.
by the tariffs you are defending
I made zero defenses of the tariffs here. I was clear yesterday, and I was clear today. Yet you still persist in lying. Why?
I am against all protectionist tariffs which this one is. But again, if you can’t import the item in question, the tariffs don’t actually matter. The FDA is the primary injunction against importing. Even if they could change labels, that takes time to do so. There would be no immediate relief of the issue. Setting tariffs to zero wouldn't help in the need now. Again. You're too stupid to understand this.
But you’ve been taught your bumper sticker and you’ll repeat what you were taught without any inspection to the argument at all.
And just like yesterday you disprove all of your prior arguments where you claim consumers pay the tax, not suppliers. LOL.
What? No I didn't. I said the tax is baked into the price that consumers pay. It has the effect of reducing demand for the product, but that's not the same as imposing a direct cost on the producer. Ultimately all taxes on businesses are just costs passed along to the consumer in the price.
You skipped right over the fact it isn’t a luxury good.
You're ignoring the fact that when faced with comparable products, on stocked shelves, one with a price tag of $20 and the other $25, all other things equal, most people will buy the cheaper option. That extra $5 is the tariff, baked into the price, paid by the consumer.
I am against all protectionist tariffs which this one is.
Mmmm k. If you say so. Your arguments against lifting them say otherwise.
But again, if you can’t import the item in question, the tariffs don’t actually matter. The FDA is the primary injunction against importing.
No shit. Why don't they change the labels? Ask that. Why?
Because it's still going to cost twenty five percent more even if they do! That results in lower demand, so it's not worth the expense.
Even if they could change labels, that takes time to do so. There would be no immediate relief of the issue. Setting tariffs to zero wouldn’t help in the need now.
Sadly that is true. However the tariffs are still why the companies don't go through the time and expense of making new labels, resulting in them not being imported at all.
If those tariffs you claim to oppose were lifted, the producers would be on a more even competitive footing, and more likely to comply with the FDA.
What the fuck is the comparable good? There is a shortage retard.
The labels are literally what is stopping importation. How do you not fucking get this?
WIC is one of the primary causes of the shortages as well as it was traded for minimized distribution size.
How little do you understand the fucking issue?
The labels are literally what is stopping importation. How do you not fucking get this?
I. Agreed. With. You.
Question you fail to ask is why the foreign producers don't comply with the label requirements. Why not?
BECAUSE OF THE TARIFF!!!!
It’s not just labeling, FDA insists on the same ingredients and labeling.
You two (and some of the other commenters) remind me of the story of the blind men and the elephant. Each of you is focused on one part of the problem while ignoring the bigger picture. The shortages were caused by bad policy, but it wasn't any single policy.
Yes, senseless FDA requirements lock imports out. But a big reason foreign producers can't be arsed to jump through those hoops is because tariffs would make their products much more expensive. Their products would never be more than a small niche in the US. They'd take years to make enough money to justify the costs of FDA compliance with no guarantee they wouldn't face new challenges in the meantime. Arguing about FDA! vs Tariffs! doesn't make much sense because the two problems are mutually reinforcing.
Nobody here seems to understand how the WIC program works either, so they overlook how it creates effective monopolies in each state and how this makes the domestic market far less responsive. This is why shortages were severe in some places and a non-issue in others. The way the FDA's oversight went from lax to lockdown with little warning didn't exactly help anything.
Arguing over exactly which bad policy caused the shortages makes no sense. This was basically a perfect storm where multiple bad policies combined to destroy any semblance of a free market and produce a system that didn't respond to market forces because it couldn't. Overturning all these bad policies would be ideal, but just taking away one of them would have reduced a crisis to little more than a nuisance.
Sarc, let me see if you can be walked through some simplistic analysis.
Between December 2019 and March 2023, food prices grew by a staggering 23 to 24 percent.32-35
https://thefga.org/research/feeding-inflation-bidens-unlawful-food-stamp-expansion/
Did people stop buying food due to inflation increases?
Yet your assumption here is people will stop buying baby formula due to a cost increase of a similar scale. Discuss.
No, that's not what I said at all. When there aren't shortages, which is most of the time, the imported baby formula would be right next to the domestic stuff on the shelf. Assuming the labels were compliant and it was actually imported. It would also cost 25% more, without being any better. Perhaps people with a fetish for European things might buy it, but probably not for babies. So it's going to sit there. The domestic shit will move off the shelves and the imported shit will sit there.
It's not worth it to comply with the FDA as long as the tariffs keep the price artificially high.
I don't understand if you're being deliberately obtuse or just don't get it.
As far as people buying food goes, they adjusted. They bought pork chops instead of steaks, chicken thighs instead of breasts. In economics they call that "substitution" which, as a self proclaimed expert on the subject, you should understand.
They still bought food despite wide inflation on products. If this is your argument what is the shift for baby formula. Youre intentionally ignoring the question.
Because again. No thinking involved for you.
It's not my argument. You're quite adept at arguing against what I don't say, but you suck at arguing against anything I actually say.
It is literally what you keep reverting to you dishonest shit.
You literally ignore the argument presented and keep retreating to bumper stickers.
What a dishonest shit.
Care to translate that into something that doesn't look like it was written by a butthurt thirteen year old?
A superior alternative to formula is available in most cases.
Not always. Not all mothers can produce enough milk on their own to feed their babies. And the wet nurse industry kind of doesn't exist at the moment except in some random communities.
Once upon a time there were mothers who couldn't produce milk who also lacked access to wet nurses, yet their children survived.
According to you that's impossible.
Present your solution sarc. I will wait.
I’m sure you’ve solved the baby formula shortage issue.
I don’t have a short term solution. Never said I did.
Lifting the tariffs would be a long-term solution because foreign producers hopefully wouldn’t be effected by domestic shortages.
That drunken pussy is obsessed with you.
I think it’s love.
He's like Drax from the Marvel movies.
Ideas!
You're defending a dumb comment. Typical for you. Allies above intelligence after all.
If I was defending a dumb comment I'd be defending you taking what he said seriously.
No, you are defending an uber ally of the left making a dumb comment.
Sometimes, sarc, it's better to stop while you're behind, way behind.
I'm serious. It's fairly obvious when someone is exaggerating, and it's embarrassingly stupid to take that literally, time after time after time...
Youre a walking meme.
And your ego renders you incapable of saying "You're right" to someone you don't like. If there isn't a meme for that there should be.
I did it here. Check it out.
https://reason.com/2023/09/26/will-the-government-shutdown-result-in-hunger-for-millions-as-reuters-claims/?comments=true#comment-10251564
That was me setting my ego aside and agreeing with you to make a point.
You should try it sometime.
At least once.
One time.
Once.
HAAAAAAAAAAAAA HA HA HA! Who am I kidding? You disappear soon as the other person is shown to be right. Do you shake hands or say "You were right"?
No. Never. You can't. Never have and never will.
By saying something really stupid? Not sure you're mocking anybody when you make the dumb comment.
Dear JesseAz: why do you bother to engage? From the point of view of many, I'm sure, what we see on threads is comment after comment of JesseAz arguing with a grey box.
Can't you just put it on mute and enjoy the free time you'll recover?
Living paycheck to paycheck doesn't mean you're at or below poverty, just living above your means (whatever those means may be)
This.
Aye. In retrospect getting divorced was the best thing to happen to me financially, because the woman spent everything she could put her paws on an then some, while I'm content with my lifestyle and invest/bank whatever's left after the bills are paid.
And never having bothered to form a proper emergency fund.
turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Most Dem pols and "blue-anon" aligned media insist on using the Federal poverty line (or the old Obama trope of "near poverty" for those making between 101-200% of that amount) as if it applies in every part of the country.
Anyone making 200% of the federal poverty line in a major city in CA is at best living in a van unless they're a retiree with a paid off mortgage (and a property tax assesment based on their home's value in the 1970s) or have been in the same rent-controlled apartment since 1990 or before.
It's also possible to end up living paycheck to paycheck while making a livable income, it just takes a few unwise choices (I did it myself through most of my 20s) and a refusal to live within or below one's means.
In… New York... there were 1,449,500 children aged 0-4 and pregnant or postpartum women .
Not counting Venezuelans.
Now now..."pregnant or postpartum birthing persons with bonus holes".
This is the sad state of journalism today. Just repeating whatever the government says.
"Daddy-Gov will take care of us so we will NEVER have to work.", Preaches the 'gov-gun' criminals endlessly.
Here's a thought. If you live in poverty it's nobodies fault but your own and frankly I'm not out of line to say many PURPOSELY live in poverty just to grant them 'gov-gun' theft. I'm estimating 80% or better.
Of the 330M people in this nation 77.9% are over 18 = 257M adults and 130M who are actually working meaning 1/2 live off of someone else.
Liz has 7 of the top 10 actual libertarian articles in the last 2 weeks. Don't know what the other 3 of the 10 would be sadly.
"Just one problem: That's not true."
Of course, to Reuters, that bit if trivia is irrelevant.
It's Reuters' emotional truth.
Their 'lived' truth. Of course they live in an ivory tower.
The government told them so. They have obediently regurgitated it.
"Biden, US officials warn of hunger for millions in a government shutdown," reads a Reuters headline from yesterday. The article details how Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack told reporters this week..."
This administration is an embarrassment.
Well, it is true that Biden and other officials have warned about it.
Did we bring Liz in from Spiked-online? Curious commenters want to know.
Oh, and also, I guess the big news of the day is Trudeau brought in a no-shit WWII SS Nazi into the Canadian parliament, and they gave him not one, but two standing ovations. When this uncomfortable fact was revealed to the rainbow-flag bedecked Prime Minister, he blamed Russian interference. Not joking.
Poland wants to put the old bastard up on trial for war crimes now.
She's been working for Reason for more than a year. But for some reason now seems to be her big moment. At least for the troglodytes in the comment section.
https://babylonbee.com/news/trudeau-attempts-to-distract-from-nazi-controversy-by-growing-cool-new-mustache
. . . . which doesn't seem to bother a conservative anti-government crank like Liz Wolfe or her antisocial, disaffected, faux libertarian right-wing fans.
Wait'll you see what the REAL Libertarians want!
LOL. Such a catastrophe, I'm sure. Maybe it's time to start weaning folk off that big nipple in the sky we like to call government.
Nothing says modern, successful society like having everyone dependent on government.
Fuck off and die, asshole bigot.
Having a real libertarian instead of a libertine writing really bothers you, doesn't it, hicklib? I'm so glad this gets under your skin and makes it crawl.
This must be one of those indulgences that adjective Artie and the betters are still permitting. For now.
Wait... aren't titties the natural way for infants to be fed? Doesn't seem like something that needs federal funding.
Also, these programs don't just "help people scrape by." They pay out way more than necessary. People receiving these benefits have more free cash than your average middle class worker. They do not function as supplemental aid. They outright encourage dependency and fraud.
Undernourished children has NOT been a problem in the US for many decades.
Rather, adult and childhood obesity rates have become epidemic due (in part) to the US food stamp program, which not only allows/encourages women, families and adults to consume far more calories (than they'd otherwise consume), but to eat lots of heart/kidney disease, diabetes and obesity causing meat and dairy products, and lots of ultra processed food products that contain lots of added sugar, salt and flavorings.
… but to eat lots of heart/kidney disease, diabetes and obesity causing meat and dairy products,
Meat and dairy cause diabetes? Since when?
Kids are so fat these days. There's got to be a way to make money off that." ~~ Agnes Skinner
"Poverty and obesity: the role of energy density and energy costs"
The association between poverty and obesity may be mediated, in part, by the low cost of energy-dense foods and may be reinforced by the high palatability of sugar and fat. This economic framework provides an explanation for the observed links between socioeconomic variables and obesity when taste, dietary energy density, and diet costs are used as intervening variables. More and more Americans are becoming overweight and obese while consuming more added sugars and fats and spending a lower percentage of their disposable income on food.
--------
How else can I read that but to think that people are simply choosing to eat low-cost food that are high in fat and sugar (energy-dense) because they like it and it’s cheap? And that given people in poverty a “chose any food you want” card is a bad idea? People in poverty are not starving, they are eating too much of the wrong food, by choice. Or maybe they just don’t know any better, I have to admit that, but really how stupid must you be to not know that Big Macs make you fat?
I made this argument once on a different forum, and was told by one progressive there that I had made a "truly malicious, ignorant misinterpretation...deserves only contempt"
The US food supply system has spent 50-60 years developing high-carb, highly processed, packaged food to make up a low-cost food supply in reaction to the malthusian ideas of the 1960s and 1970s. A lot of the added sugars are likely attributable to a combination of corn subsidies, people gravitating toward "yummy" foods, and possibly some of the addictive qualities of those sugars.
Since these kinds of food ship and store very well without refrigeration, they're very common in food banks and are often inexpensive as well.
Another factor that could play in is that the Government and "health" establishment spent most of the 1980s and 1990s promoting the "heart healthy" benefits of a low-protein high-carbohydrate diet, and for most of that time was also promoting higher intake of trans-fats and replacement of animal fats with seed oils (both hydrogenated and in liquid form).
The thing I can't help but wonder about (although the answer is probably tied to corporate bottom lines and/or some version of "regulatory capture") is why certain foods are so flagrantly unhealthy that they have to be banned from public school campuses that those same foods aren't blocked from eligibility for purchase with SNAP/EBT assistance money.
The great part about "kids starving to death" is that their parent(s) are driving to the grocery store in cars, not walking to a dumpster with a plastic bag.
"When you use incorrect stats to bolster your claims, as Reuters did, all kinds of foolish conclusions follow."
turd hardest hit.
>>Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack
is a liar. replacement required.
Kick him right in the vilsack.
if resignation is the result ...
"Nearly half of U.S. newborns rely on WIC...Just one problem: That's not true.
I'm pretty sure I see a second problem there too.
If the 87k new IRS agents starve that would be a good start.
Careful what you wish for. 87k starving agents are a lot more dangerous than 87k well fed agents.
So? Reuters and all other Official Media, their bosses in the White House, their left wing academic (yes, redundant) allies, and their real bosses in the billionaire club are all lying cunts who have as much regard for the truth as they do for personal liberty, property rights, rule of law, and free trade.
So, worst case, hundreds of thousands, rather than millions of infants will go hungry. Who cares? It's not hungry infants who were behind the French or Russian revolutions, or the kerfuffle in Egypt's Tahir Square a few years back, it was hungry adults. The hungry infants stayed at home. An infant, no matter how hungry is no threat to our billionaires and the status quo.
Why would you care? If you and your fellow travelers aren’t murdering babies in the womb, you’re raping and surgically mutilating them.
Seriously, no democrat has any business complaining about the welfare of children.
"Why would you care?"
I thought I made that clear. Hundreds of thousands of hungry infants, as long as they are not being raped or mutilated, are to be tolerated as an acceptable cost of partisan squabbling. Hungry adults threaten our billionaires and the status quo.
Then get out of the way and stop murdering/raping/mutilating/ children.
"Then get out of the way and stop murdering/raping/mutilating/ children."
Can I at least starve them? Come on, work with me here.
mtrueman|8.30.17 @ 1:42PM|#
"Spouting nonsense is an end in itself."
Perhaps the solution is post-birth abortions? Pesky limitations like arbitrary "moment of birth" rules should not stand in the way of a woman in poverty getting those abortions.
“Perhaps the solution is post-birth abortions? ”
I think not. But I value life. But whether to abort or not is a decision best made by the woman and her care givers. The better solution would be to ensure the hungry get fed. 9 out of 10 billionaires agree.
I earn $5000 per hour while taking risks and traveling to remote parts of the world. I worked remotely last week while in Rome, Monte Carlo, and eventually Paris. I’m back in the USA this week. I only perform simple activities from this one excellent website. see it,
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"None of this is to downplay the hardships or indignities of poverty. "
See, that's a big mistake right there. We should be fighting the misconception that being "poor" in America is this tragic, near-death experience. It's not. You can be "poor" in America and have a better quality of life than 3/4 of the rest of the world. Being "poor" can be a temporary situation, but the easier we make it to live a comfortable life while you're "poor," the less incentive people have to improve their own lives.
https://www.heritage.org/poverty-and-inequality/report/understanding-poverty-the-united-states-surprising-facts-about
“For most Americans, the word “poverty” suggests near destitution: an inability to provide nutritious food, clothing, and reasonable shelter for one’s family. However, only a small number of the 46 million persons classified as “poor” by the Census Bureau fit that description. While real material hardship certainly does occur, it is limited in scope and severity.
“Although the mainstream media broadcast alarming stories about widespread and severe hunger in the nation, in reality, most of the poor do not experience hunger or food shortages. The U.S. Department of Agriculture collects data on these topics in its household food security survey. For 2009, the survey showed:
* 96 percent of poor parents stated that their children were never hungry at any time during the year because they could not afford food.
* 83 percent of poor families reported having enough food to eat.
* 82 percent of poor adults reported never being hungry at any time in the prior year due to lack of money for food.
“Other government surveys show that the average consumption of protein, vitamins, and minerals is virtually the same for poor and middle-class children and is well above recommended norms in most cases.
“Television newscasts about poverty in America generally portray the poor as homeless people or as a destitute family living in an overcrowded, dilapidated trailer. In fact, however:
* Over the course of a year, 4 percent of poor persons become temporarily homeless.
* Only 9.5 percent of the poor live in mobile homes or trailers, 49.5 percent live in separate single-family houses or townhouses, and 40 percent live in apartments.
* 42 percent of poor households actually own their own homes.
* Only 6 percent of poor households are overcrowded. More than two-thirds have more than two rooms per person.
* The average poor American has more living space than the typical non-poor person in Sweden, France, or the United Kingdom.
* The vast majority of the homes or apartments of the poor are in good repair.
“By their own reports, the average poor person had sufficient funds to meet all essential needs and to obtain medical care for family members throughout the year whenever needed.
“Of course, poor Americans do not live in the lap of luxury. The poor clearly struggle to make ends meet, but they are generally struggling to pay for cable TV, air conditioning, and a car, as well as for food on the table. The average poor person is far from affluent, but his lifestyle is far from the images of stark deprivation purveyed equally by advocacy groups and the media.
“The fact that the average poor household has many modern conveniences and experiences no substantial hardships does not mean that no families face hardships. As noted, the overwhelming majority of the poor are well housed and not overcrowded, but one in 25 will become temporarily homeless during the year. While most of the poor have a sufficient and fairly steady supply of food, one in five poor adults will experience temporary food shortages and hunger at some point in a year.
“The poor man who has lost his home or suffers intermittent hunger will find no consolation in the fact that his condition occurs infrequently in American society. His hardships are real and must be an important concern for policymakers. Nonetheless, anti-poverty policy needs to be based on accurate information. Gross exaggeration of the extent and severity of hardships in America will not benefit society, the taxpayers, or the poor.
“Finally, welfare policy needs to address the causes of poverty, not merely the symptoms. Among families with children, the collapse of marriage and erosion of the work ethic are the principal long-term causes of poverty. When the recession ends, welfare policy must require able-bodied recipients to work or prepare for work as a condition of receiving aid. It should also strengthen marriage in low-income communities rather than ignore and penalize it.
Maybe someone misinterpreted the stat that half of all baby formula is apparently distributed via WIC? Or at least among the legal formula market; the use of a single-source contract by WIC was a big part of the reason why that supplier not operating their factories properly caused the shortage a few years back, since the remaining half of the legal market isn't big enough to motivate competitive suppliers to produce much when they don't have the WIC contract.
Not all babies are on formula, and a lot of rich parents have been acquiring "black market" European baby formula which by many accounts is often nutritionally better than anything the FDA considers to be "safe" for commercial sale in the USA. Out of the subset of babies in the USA who are only fed FDA approved formula, half are dependent on WIC but there'd be some more math involved to figure out what portion of all the babies that amounts to.