From the Food Mail Program to Nutrition North Canada: The impact on food insecurity among Indigenous and non‐Indigenous families with children

Author:

Daley Angela1ORCID,Pandey Sujita2,Phipps Shelley3,Watson Barry4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Economics University of Maine

2. School of Health Administration Dalhousie University

3. Department of Economics Dalhousie University

4. Faculty of Business University of New Brunswick

Abstract

AbstractFood insecurity is prevalent in northern Canada, especially among Indigenous peoples. As one approach to address this issue, the federal government subsidizes the shipping of necessities to remote northern communities, initially through the Food Mail Program and then Nutrition North Canada as of April 2011. We use the Canadian Community Health Survey (2007 to 2016) and a difference‐in‐differences model to estimate the impact of the policy change on food insecurity, testing for heterogeneity between Indigenous and non‐Indigenous families. Our results, which withstand several robustness checks, indicate that the policy change increased the likelihood of overall food insecurity by 8.9 percentage points (77.3% relative to the sample mean) and moderate/severe food insecurity by 7.1 percentage points (89.3% relative to the sample mean). It also increased severe food insecurity among Indigenous families by 7.3 percentage points (more than three times the sample mean). There was, however, variation across regions and subsamples of families with children. Specifically, the policy change was particularly harmful to Indigenous families in the territories and Inuit Nunangat. The detrimental impact was also heightened in the presence of children, especially when considering severe food insecurity among Indigenous families.

Funder

National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

Reference70 articles.

1. Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada(2013)Implementation Evaluation of the Nutrition North Canada Program: Final Report. Evaluation Performance Measurement and Review Branch. Available atwww.rcaanc‐cirnac.gc.ca/eng/1395347953550/1538053744456

2. Alasia A. F.Bédard J.Bélanger E.Guimond andC.Penney(2017) “Measuring remoteness and accessibility: A set of indices for Canadian communities ” catalogue no. 18‐001‐X. Ottawa ON: Statistics Canada. Available atwww150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/18‐001‐x/18‐001‐x2017002‐eng.htm

3. Is the 1918 Influenza Pandemic Over? Long‐Term Effects of In Utero Influenza Exposure in the Post‐1940 U.S. Population

4. Arriagada P.(2017) “Food insecurity among Inuit living in Inuit Nunangat ” catalogue no. 75‐006‐X. Ottawa ON: Statistics Canada. Available atwww150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/75‐006‐x/2017001/article/14774‐eng.htm

5. Saving Babies? Revisiting the effect of very low birth weight classification

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