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The impact of benefit sanctioning on food insecurity: a dynamic cross-area study of food bank usage in the UK

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The impact of benefit sanctioning on food insecurity: a dynamic cross-area study of food bank usage in the UK. / Loopstra, Rachel; Fledderjohann, Jasmine; Reeves, Aaron et al.
Oxford: Department of Sociology, University of Oxford, 2016. p. 1-28 (Sociology Working Papers; No. 2016-03).

Research output: Working paper

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Loopstra R, Fledderjohann J, Reeves A, Stuckler D. The impact of benefit sanctioning on food insecurity: a dynamic cross-area study of food bank usage in the UK. Oxford: Department of Sociology, University of Oxford. 2016 Oct, p. 1-28. (Sociology Working Papers; 2016-03).

Author

Loopstra, Rachel ; Fledderjohann, Jasmine ; Reeves, Aaron et al. / The impact of benefit sanctioning on food insecurity : a dynamic cross-area study of food bank usage in the UK. Oxford : Department of Sociology, University of Oxford, 2016. pp. 1-28 (Sociology Working Papers; 2016-03).

Bibtex

@techreport{670fb9bb94bc4f2bb9947fe784b32648,
title = "The impact of benefit sanctioning on food insecurity: a dynamic cross-area study of food bank usage in the UK",
abstract = "Household food security, which may be compromised by short-term income shocks, is a key determinant of health. Since 2012, the UK witnessed marked increases in the rate of {\textquoteleft}sanctions{\textquoteright} applied to unemployment insurance claimants, which stop payments to claimants for a minimum of four weeks. In 2013, over 1 million sanctions were applied, potentially leaving people facing economic hardship and driving them to use food banks. Here we test this hypothesis by linking data from the Trussell Trust Foodbank Network with records on sanctioning rates across 259 local authorities in the UK. After accounting for local authority differences and time trends, as the rate of sanctioning increased by 10 per 100,000 adults, the rate of adults fed by foodbanks by an additional 3.36 adults per 100,000 (95% CI: 1.71 to 5.01). The availability of food distribution sites affected how tightly sanctioning and food bank usage were associated (p<0.001 for interaction term), such that in areas with few distribution sites, rising sanctions led to smaller increases in Trussell Trust food bank usage. Sanctioning appears to be closely linked with rising need for emergency food assistance, but the impact of sanctioning on food insecurity is likely not fully reflected in available data. There is a need to monitor household food insecurity in the UK to fully understand the impact of government policies on this outcome.",
author = "Rachel Loopstra and Jasmine Fledderjohann and Aaron Reeves and David Stuckler",
year = "2016",
month = oct,
language = "English",
series = "Sociology Working Papers",
publisher = "Department of Sociology, University of Oxford",
number = "2016-03",
pages = "1--28",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Department of Sociology, University of Oxford",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - The impact of benefit sanctioning on food insecurity

T2 - a dynamic cross-area study of food bank usage in the UK

AU - Loopstra, Rachel

AU - Fledderjohann, Jasmine

AU - Reeves, Aaron

AU - Stuckler, David

PY - 2016/10

Y1 - 2016/10

N2 - Household food security, which may be compromised by short-term income shocks, is a key determinant of health. Since 2012, the UK witnessed marked increases in the rate of ‘sanctions’ applied to unemployment insurance claimants, which stop payments to claimants for a minimum of four weeks. In 2013, over 1 million sanctions were applied, potentially leaving people facing economic hardship and driving them to use food banks. Here we test this hypothesis by linking data from the Trussell Trust Foodbank Network with records on sanctioning rates across 259 local authorities in the UK. After accounting for local authority differences and time trends, as the rate of sanctioning increased by 10 per 100,000 adults, the rate of adults fed by foodbanks by an additional 3.36 adults per 100,000 (95% CI: 1.71 to 5.01). The availability of food distribution sites affected how tightly sanctioning and food bank usage were associated (p<0.001 for interaction term), such that in areas with few distribution sites, rising sanctions led to smaller increases in Trussell Trust food bank usage. Sanctioning appears to be closely linked with rising need for emergency food assistance, but the impact of sanctioning on food insecurity is likely not fully reflected in available data. There is a need to monitor household food insecurity in the UK to fully understand the impact of government policies on this outcome.

AB - Household food security, which may be compromised by short-term income shocks, is a key determinant of health. Since 2012, the UK witnessed marked increases in the rate of ‘sanctions’ applied to unemployment insurance claimants, which stop payments to claimants for a minimum of four weeks. In 2013, over 1 million sanctions were applied, potentially leaving people facing economic hardship and driving them to use food banks. Here we test this hypothesis by linking data from the Trussell Trust Foodbank Network with records on sanctioning rates across 259 local authorities in the UK. After accounting for local authority differences and time trends, as the rate of sanctioning increased by 10 per 100,000 adults, the rate of adults fed by foodbanks by an additional 3.36 adults per 100,000 (95% CI: 1.71 to 5.01). The availability of food distribution sites affected how tightly sanctioning and food bank usage were associated (p<0.001 for interaction term), such that in areas with few distribution sites, rising sanctions led to smaller increases in Trussell Trust food bank usage. Sanctioning appears to be closely linked with rising need for emergency food assistance, but the impact of sanctioning on food insecurity is likely not fully reflected in available data. There is a need to monitor household food insecurity in the UK to fully understand the impact of government policies on this outcome.

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Sociology Working Papers

SP - 1

EP - 28

BT - The impact of benefit sanctioning on food insecurity

PB - Department of Sociology, University of Oxford

CY - Oxford

ER -