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cassianolealyesterday at 8:03 PM2 repliesview on HN

> It's also interesting to think about the fact that you can't fix food scarcity in general by simply giving hungry people money, because money is too fungible.

Is that a fact? Do you have references to back it?


Replies

jandrewrogersyesterday at 9:05 PM

The widespread existence of secondary markets for SNAP benefits, which convert subsidized food for poor people into cash, carries this implication. This is pretty normal in some poor communities and that cash is commonly diverted to various vices. Some malnutrition is a consequence of this. Adding friction to the conversion of welfare benefits to cash is a feature.

You can't force poor people to spend cash on proper nutrition and a minority of them don't. It isn't a moral judgement but an observable fact. A lot of policies around welfare are targeted at trying to prevent this minority from slowly killing themselves in public.

pixl97yesterday at 9:50 PM

I mean it's pretty straight forward that this won't fix all hungry people as some portion of said hungry people are addicted to drugs in the extent they'll starve. That in itself may be solvable by things like free drug clinics (drugs are cheap, it's prohibition that makes them expensive).

And for the most part it's not the drug users that we're worried about starving, it's their children at home that tend to be a bigger issue. Hence things like free school lunches do a big service to ensuring they get enough to eat.