Food Assistance


Book Description




Food Stamp Program


Book Description




From Paper to Plastic


Book Description




Food Assistance


Book Description




Food Assistance


Book Description

Examines two alternatives to the coupon-based system for delivering benefits; The use of electronic fund transfer technologies, referred to as electronic benefits transfer, and the distribution of benefits by check, referred to as cash-out. Also examines the effects that the alternatives might have on the programs costs, number of participants, and assurance that benefits are actually used for food. 7 charts and tables







Food Stamp Trafficking


Book Description

Every year, food stamp recipients exchange hundreds of millions of dollars in benefits for cash instead of food with retailers across the country, a practice known as trafficking. From 2000 to 2005, the Food Stamp Program has grown from $15 billion to $29 billion in benefits. During this period of time, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) replaced paper food stamp coupons with electronic benefit transfer (EBT) cards that work much like a debit card at the grocery checkout counter. Given these program changes and continuing retailer fraud, GAO was asked to provide information on (1) what is known about the extent and nature of retailer food stamp trafficking, (2) the efforts of federal agencies to combat such trafficking, and (3) program vulnerabilities. To do this, GAO interviewed agency officials, visited 10 field offices, conducted case file reviews, and analyzed data from the FNS retailer database.




Food Assistance


Book Description

Food Assistance: Reducing Fraud and Abuse in the Food Stamp Program With Electronic Benefit Transfer Technologies




The Food Stamp Program and Electronic Benefit Transfer Systems


Book Description

Distributed to some depository libraries in microfiche.