Literaturnachweis - Detailanzeige
Autor/inn/en | Handbury, Jessie; Moshary, Sarah |
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Institution | National Bureau of Economic Research |
Titel | School Food Policy Affects Everyone. Retail Responses to the National School Lunch Program. |
Quelle | Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research (2021)
PDF als Volltext (1); PDF als Volltext (2) |
Reihe | NBER working paper series. w29384 |
Beigaben | Illustrationen |
Sprache | englisch |
Dokumenttyp | online; Monographie; Graue Literatur |
DOI | 10.3386/w29384 |
Schlagwörter | Schule; Lebensmittel; Ernährungspolitik; Konsum; Kosten; Management; Preistheorie; Arbeitspapier; Gemeinschaftsverpflegung; USA |
Abstract | We study the private market response to the National School Lunch Program, documenting economically meaningful spillovers to non-recipients. We focus on the Community Eligibility Provision (CEP), an expansion of the lunch program under the 2010 Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act. Under the CEP, participating schools offer free lunch to all students. We leverage both the staggered roll-out and eligibility criterion for the CEP, which is limited to schools where at least 40% of students participate in other means-tested welfare programs. We find that local adoption of the CEP causes households with children to reduce their grocery purchases, leading to a 10% decline in grocery sales at large retail chains. Retailers respond with chain-level price adjustments: chains with the most exposure lower prices by 2.5% across all outlets in the years following adoption, so that the program's welfare benefits propagate spatially. Using a stylized model of grocery demand, we estimate that, by 2016, the indirect benefit had reduced grocery costs for the median household by approximately 4.5%. |
Erfasst von | ZBW - Leibniz-Informationszentrum Wirtschaft, Kiel |
Update | 2022/2 |