Monday, March 24, 2014

Americans Not on Food Stamps


Click to enlarge.

Over the last 13 years, for each person our population has grown we have added one person to the food stamp program. We better hope that trend does not continue. It's already lasted 5 years longer than it did in the 1970s.

Source Data:
St. Louis Fed: Population
USDA: SNAP Annual Summary

4 comments:

Troy said...

Past 13 years we've also added $400B/yr to our defense spending, a food stamp program in disguise.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/FDEFX

$400B / $50k/yr is 8M jobs

wonder where the money is really going, but at any rate this decade is going to be like the 1990s for the military, a lot of people getting pushed out of the service.

Had a highschool bud finish Annapolis in '89, the Red Empire fell when he was starting nuke school.

A naval career doomed from the start.

Stagflationary Mark said...

Troy,

Past 13 years we've also added $400B/yr to our defense spending, a food stamp program in disguise.

It is. Here is another food stamp program in disguise (no disrespect intended to our military).

Troy said...

The costs of the governor's planned prison contracts vary, from $26,000-a-year to house a prisoner out of state, to $30,200 within California — far below the $62,400-a-year California will spend on those in its own prisons. However, contractors take only the healthiest inmates, leaving California with the costlier and higher-risk population.

Budget records show California employs one prison worker for every two inmates, while private prisons outside of the state have one worker for every 36 inmates.

. . .

Paying people $500/week to play xbox all day doesn't look so bad.

Certainly solve the minimum wage problem. We could abolish it, since all employers would be competing with the xbox leagues for their workers.

Just another reason to move to Japan. Japan's prisons are very Japanese, and not in a good way, more like the WW2 way.

Stagflationary Mark said...

Troy,

Paying people $500/week to play xbox all day doesn't look so bad.

One wonders how many making $750/week would opt to downgrade though. D'oh! ;)