A medical assistant and her family in a Colorado resort community face a difficult situation.
Both she and her husband are healing from surgeries, struggling to financially recover with growing medical and housing costs. Together, they hold five part-time jobs to support their two children. Due to their income, they don’t qualify for Medicaid or food assistance programs like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC). Even if they did qualify, they are reluctant to apply, fearing that it could hurt their prospects for getting U.S. citizenship.
This family illustrates a datapoint from the 2023 Colorado Health Access Survey (CHAS) that at first glance does not make sense. People with incomes two or three times the poverty level reported more food insecurity than those below the poverty level.
Findings From the CHAS
Since 2019, the CHAS has measured food insecurity by asking Coloradans if they have ever eaten less than they thought they should in the past year because they couldn’t afford food. Food insecurity rates dipped in 2021 (from 9.6% in 2019 to 8.1% in 2021) because of emergency pandemic support. But that support expired, and the rate jumped to 11.2% of Coloradans reporting food insecurity in 2023.
These statewide averages mask a major concern for people with low or middle incomes. Nearly 17% of Coloradans earning poverty wages or less reported food insecurity. In the lower income brackets, the more money Coloradans made, the more likely they were to report food insecurity. More than a fifth (21.7%) of people making two to three times the poverty level said they were food insecure.
The story of the family with five jobs can help us understand why.
Food security status is linked with general and mental health. In 2023, four in 10 people (40.7%) who ate less than they thought they should reported fair or poor general health, compared with 11.2% of those who could afford enough to eat. Similarly, over half (55.1%) of Coloradans reporting food insecurity also reported poor mental health, compared to 21.8% of other Coloradans.
Coloradans can qualify for SNAP if their household earns less than 200% of the Federal Poverty Level. The CHAS shows that people with incomes just above this cutoff have the highest levels of food insecurity. Based on 2023 poverty guidelines, these households, where a family of four would earn $60,000 to $90,000, don’t qualify for SNAP. This phenomenon, where households earn just enough to disqualify them for programs but not enough to afford high-quality food, is referred to as the “cliff effect.”