Food Insecurity Trended Upward in Midst of High Inflation and Fewer Supports

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Food Insecurity Trended Upward in Midst of High Inflation and Fewer Supports

28 Sep 2022

Approximately one in five adults reported experiencing household food insecurity in both spring 2020 and again in summer 2022, after a decline in reported food insecurity in spring 2021. High food price inflation, along with elevated costs for other basic needs, such as transportation and rent, have likely eroded food budgets in the last year. In addition, some of the safety net responses that buffered food insecurity in 2021 are no longer in place. In this brief, we use data from the Health Reform Monitoring Survey, a nationally representative survey of nonelderly adults, to assess food insecurity among households with nonelderly adults in March/April 2020, April 2021, and June 2022. We find the following:
health policy center income and benefits policy center social safety net food insecurity and hunger

Authors

Elaine Waxman, Julio Salas, Poonam Gupta, Michael Karpman

Published in
United States of America