Panel Paper: Local Labor Market Conditions and the Dynamics of SNAP Participation: Evidence from SNAP Administrative Records, 2007-2012

Saturday, November 5, 2016 : 3:30 PM
Oak Lawn (Washington Hilton)

*Names in bold indicate Presenter

Benjamin Cerf, U.S. Census Bureau and Erik Scherpf, U.S. Department of Agriculture


This study estimates the effect of fluctuations in local labor conditions on the likelihood existing participants are able to transition out of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Our primary data are SNAP administrative records from New York State (2007 - 2012) linked to the 2010 Census at the person-level. We further augment these data by linking to industry-specific labor market indicators at the county-level. We find that local labor markets matter for the length of time individuals spend on SNAP, but there is substantial heterogeneity in estimated effects across local industries. While employment growth in industries with small shares of SNAP participants has no impact on SNAP exits, growth in local industries with high shares of SNAP participants, especially food  service and retail, significantly increases the likelihood that recipients exit the program. We also observe corresponding increases in entries when these industries experience localized contractions. Notably, estimated industry effects vary across race groups and parental status, with Black Alone non-Hispanic, Hispanic, and mothers benefiting the least from improvements in local labor market conditions. Our models include county fixed effects and time-trends, and our results are identified by detrended within-county variation in local labor market conditions. We confirm that our results are not driven by endogenous inter-county mobility, New York City labor markets, or cohort composition effects.