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The First U.S. Food Stamp Program: An Example of Rent Seeking and Avoiding
Authors:Charles D  DeLorme  Jr    David R Kamerschen  David C  Redman
Institution:[Charles D. DeLorme, Jr., Ph.D., is professor of economics, David R. Kamerschen, Ph.D., is distinguished professor of economics, and David C. Redman is a graduate student in economics at the University of Georgia, Brooks Hall, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602.]
Abstract:Abstract . Rent seeking involves the wasteful expenses incurred to secure, acquire, or maintain a monopoly position. Rent avoiding involves the expenditures undertaken to avoid the imposition of rent-seeking costs. Each represents a social cost of Tullock rectangle loss in addition to the dead-weight or Harberger triangle loss that combined to form the Harberger-Tullock trapezoid social cost. The first Food Stamp Program in the United States came about through the rent-seeking and/or rent-avoiding efforts of farmers, grocers, bankers, and other economic agents and did not lead to the promotion of social welfare. The evidence of these self-interested efforts was gleaned from articles in the New York Times and government documents. The first Food Stamp Program also fits the economic theory of regulation developed by Stigler, Jordan, Peltzman and others, and it involved imposed costs on economic agents as the program evolved.
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