7 States With the Most People on Food Stamps

rockin'robin

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With a grocery bills priced as high as $1,300 per month as of late, some American workers simply cannot afford all of their groceries on top of everything else they already have to buy. This is why the government offers food stamps.


The USDA Food and Nutrition Service reports that as of September 2014, there were around 46.5 million individual food stamp recipients (22.7 million households) receiving an average benefit of $123.74 each (around $257 per household).


To be eligible, a household has to earn a gross income amount that’s less than 130% of the poverty level, or a net income amount (gross income minus deductions) that’s less than 100% of the poverty level for their family size.

This means, a single person can be eligible for food stamps if his or her gross monthly income is under $1,265 ($15,180 per year), and a family of four can be eligible if they gross less than $2,584 per month ($31,008 per year). The applicant also can’t be a wealthy person who simply doesn’t have a steady income source. So, if the applicant has thousands of dollars sitting in the bank, for instance, they won’t apply as cash assets are considered as well.

So overall, the program makes perfect sense on paper. It sounds completely reasonable: If you earn too little money, you can temporarily receive a card for your groceries for a while. Food stamps help millions of individuals and families, but the corresponding billions of dollars that the program costs make some taxpayers critical of it.

A taxpayer’s view of the welfare system depends on many factors — his or her upbringing, personal experiences, and even where he or she lives. In some areas of the country, food stamp use is more common than in others.

We’ve created a list of the states that have the most food stamp recipients per capita. To determine the states on this list, we used the USDA Food Nutrition Service’s most recent state-by-state data, coupled with population data from the Census Bureau. States with the highest number of food stamp participants relative to population ranked highest. We’ve also included a state-by-state breakdown of food stamp use in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.


States with the most people on food stamps

7. Louisiana
Number of food stamp recipients: 868,192
Percentage of the state’s population on food stamps: 18.67%
Total cost of just these benefits alone (That is, how much do just the money on those EBT cards cost the state?): Around $107.4 million
Cost of benefits alone per capita in this state: $23.10

6. Tennessee
Number of food stamp recipients: Just over 1.28 million
Percentage of the state’s population on food stamps: 19.58%
Total cost of just these benefits alone (That is, how much do just the money on those EBT cards cost the state?): Around $158.7 million
Cost of benefits alone per capita in this state: $24.23

5. Oregon
Number of food stamp recipients: 791,222
Percentage of the state’s population on food stamps: 19.93%
Total cost of just these benefits alone (That is, how much do just the money on those EBT cards cost the state?): Around $98 million
Cost of benefits alone per capita in this state: $24.66 per person

4. West Virginia
Number of food stamp recipients: 369,249
Percentage of the state’s population on food stamps: 19.96%
Total cost of just these benefits alone (That is, how much do just the money on those EBT cards cost the state?): Around $45.7 million
Cost of benefits alone per capita in this state: $24.69 per person

3. New Mexico
Number of food stamp recipients: 448,328
Percentage of the state’s population on food stamps: 21.5%
Total cost of just these benefits alone (That is, how much do just the money on those EBT cards cost the state?): Around $55.5 million
Cost of benefits alone per capita in this state: $26.60 per person

2. Mississippi
Number of food stamp recipients: 650,911
Percentage of the state’s population on food stamps: 21.74%
Total cost of just these benefits alone (That is, how much do just the money on those EBT cards cost the state?): Around $80.5 million
Estimated cost of benefits alone per capita in this state: $26.90 per person

1. District of Columbia
Number of food stamp recipients: 144,768
Percentage of the state’s population on food stamps: 21.97%
Total cost of just these benefits alone (That is, how much do just the money on those EBT cards cost the state?): Around $18 million
Estimated cost of benefits alone per capita in this state: $27.19 per person

http://wallstcheatsheet.com/personal-finance/7-states-with-the-most-people-on-food-stamps.html/2/
 
New Mexico? It need replaced with Alabama as 3rd, best pal with Mississippi.
 
I'm kinda surprised about Oregon.
 
I'm kinda surprised about Oregon.

I was going to say something about Oregon. I always thought of it as a prosperous state, til we went there. Hubby had an interview about an ocean going job on a tugboat. (We didn't intend to move there) Very surprised about what we saw as to reflect the need for food stamps. But man! I never saw such beauty in the landscape and along the coast. My heart swells just thinking about it. But.... I guess you can't eat beauty!

I think Maine would be on that list but for our governor who is taking as many people as he can off all welfare rolls including food stamps. Yay!
 
I find it interesting that a large portion of the heaviest usage comes from the Red states of the SE part of USA.

I also think that the just under $6,000,000,000 spent to feed the 46.5 million Americans living in poverty is money well-spent. That amount is chump change compared to our military budget. The B-2 Stealth bomber costs $2.4 billion each. Build 3 of those and the amount exceeds the entire food stamp program by over a billion dollars. Note that we currently have 20 such aircraft. We could food stamp every American for less than those 20 B-2 bombers cost, and that is just a small portion of our military spending. They have lots of other planes buzzing around.
 
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