2025-08-13
9 分钟NPR.
Republicans are on the road selling President Donald Trump's new tax and spending law.
And we're on the road, too, digging into what that law actually does.
In today's case,
we're looking at how the act makes the largest cut in history to one of the country's biggest safety net programs.
That would be the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as SNAP or food stamps.
About 12% of U.S. residents receive SNAP to help pay for groceries,
and about 40% of them are children.
Ken Cobb is a professor at Furman University who studies food access in retail.
He says families on SNAP were already squeezed tight before these cuts.
It's heart-wrenching.
Honestly, like parents.
Skimping on their own food so that their kids can have an extra portion?
Like, that's just sad.
Ken says this law will also have a second effect on those families.
Some could lose access to their only grocery store.
This is The Indicator from Planet Money.
I'm Waylon Wong, and I'm here with friend of the show, Stephen Basaja from the Gulf States Newsroom.
Welcome back, Stephen.
Good to be with you, Waylon.