7 results on '"Garasky, Steven"'
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2. Tiebout revisited: redrawing jurisdictional boundaries
- Author
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Garasky, Steven and Haurin, Donald R.
- Subjects
Annexation (Municipal government) -- Economic aspects ,Cities and towns -- Growth ,Land value taxation -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Business ,Economics ,Government - Abstract
A study has been conducted to investigate why a large percentage of central city voters supported a deannexation proposal, despite the possibility of suffering worse consequences if the proposal is approved. The fixing of jurisdictional boundaries has been considered as one of the viable basis for establishing local tax collection schemes. A measurement of potential gains to homeowners for a particular attempted deannexation has been undertaken to relate it to observed voting patterns on the required municipal deannexation referendum. Findings indicate that heterogeneity implies the presence of cross-subsidies resulting from the combination of relative spatial uniformity in the provision of local public sector goods and local property taxes that increase with property value.
- Published
- 1997
3. Financial Management Skills Are Associated with Food Insecurity in a Sample of Households with Children in the United States.
- Author
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Gundersen, Craig G. and Garasky, Steven B.
- Subjects
- *
FINANCIAL management , *FOOD security , *HOUSEHOLDS , *PUBLIC health , *CHILDHOOD obesity , *ESTIMATION theory - Abstract
Food insecurity is one of the leading public health challenges facing children in the United States today. Reducing food insecurity and its attendant consequences requires an understanding of the determinants of food insecurity. Although previous work has greatly advanced our understanding of these determinants, the role of one of the oft-speculated important determinants of food insecurity, household financial management skills, has not been considered. To address this research lacuna, we use a recently conducted survey, the Survey of Household Finances and Childhood Obesity, that has information on specific financial management practices, impressions of financial management skills, and households' food insecurity. The sample included 904 households with children. Within this sample, 19.3% were food insecure and, for our central financial management skill variable, the mean value was 3.55 on a 5-point scale. Probit regression models estimated the probability of a household being food insecure as conditional on financial management skills and other covariates. We found a large and significant inverse relationship between a respondent's use of specific financial management practices and food insecurity and between a respondent's confidence in his or her financial management skills and food insecurity. That is, households with greater financial management abilities are less likely to be food insecure. This finding also holds when the sample is restricted to households with incomes <200% of the poverty line. These results suggest that improving households' financial management skills has the potential to reduce food insecurity in the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Adolescent Overweight and Obesity: Links to Food Insecurity and Individual, Maternal, and Family Stressors.
- Author
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Lohman, Brenda J., Stewart, Susan, Gundersen, Craig, Garasky, Steven, and Eisenmann, Joey C.
- Abstract
Abstract: Purpose: A high proportion of adolescents living in low-income households in the United States are overweight or obese, food insecure, or exposed to high levels of individual, maternal, and family stressors. The aim of this paper was to identify the associations of food insecurity and the aforementioned stressors with an adolescent''s propensity to be overweight or obese. We hypothesized that individual, maternal, and family stressors may exacerbate the relationship between food insecurity and adolescent overweight/obesity. Methods: The sample included 1011 adolescents aged 10 to 15 years and their mothers in families with incomes below 200% of the poverty line from Wave 1 of the Welfare, Children, and Families: A Three-City Study (Three-City Study). Results: A series of logistic regressions predicted the probability of an adolescent being overweight or obese. Overall, higher levels of individual stressors increased the probability of being overweight or obese for adolescents, whereas there was no direct association between food insecurity, maternal, or family stressors and overweight or obesity. The interaction of food insecurity and maternal stressors was significantly linked to the probability of being overweight or obese; more specifically, an increase in maternal stressors amplified a food insecure adolescent''s probability of being overweight or obese. Conclusions: Policies addressing adolescent obesity should consider the benefits to reducing the individual stressors facing low-income adolescents and, for food insecure adolescents, the benefits to reducing their mothers'' stressors. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Food Insecurity Is Not Associated with Childhood Obesity as Assessed Using Multiple Measures of Obesity.
- Author
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Gundersen, Craig, Garasky, Steven, and Lohman, Brenda J.
- Subjects
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OBESITY , *POOR children , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *CHILDHOOD obesity , *ETHNICITY - Abstract
There has been extensive previous research examining the connection between obesity and food insecurity, 2 serious nutrition challenges facing low-income children-in the US. All of this work used BMI to categorize a child as obese. Although BMI is one way to categorize the obesity status of a child, other measures have not been used to understand the connection between food insecurity and obesity. In response, this study used multiple measures of obesity taken from the 2001 to 2004 NHANES. The sample included 2516 children between the ages of 8 and 17 y in households with annual incomes <200% of the poverty line. Within this sample, 36.6% of children were in food-insecure households. The prevalence of obesity depended on the measure employed (BMI, waist circumference, triceps skinfold thickness, trunk fat mass, body fat), with prevalence rates ranging from 15.4 to 44.8%. Logistic regression models estimated the probability of a child being obese using multiple measures of obesity conditional on food-insecurity status and other covariates. The results indicated that food-insecure children were no more likely to be obese than their food-secure counterparts across all measures of obesity. This relationship held after controlling for other factors and examining subpopulations based on race/ ethnicity, gender, and race/ethnicity and gender. These results suggest that efforts to alleviate food insecurity and childhood obesity will work independently. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Child-specific food insecurity and overweight are not associated in a sample of 10- to 15-year-old low-income youth.
- Author
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Gundersen, Craig, Lohman, Brenda J., Eisenmann, Joey C., Garasky, Steven, and Stewart, Susan D.
- Subjects
AMERICAN children ,TEENAGERS ,CHILD nutrition ,OBESITY ,HOUSEHOLDS ,FOOD habits ,HEALTH ,NUTRITION ,COMPARATIVE studies ,FOOD supply ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,POVERTY ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
In the United States, 17% of children and adolescents are overweight and 20% live in a food insecure household. Previous studies examining the association between household food insecurity and overweight among children have been inconclusive but are limited insofar as they did not assess child-specific measures of food insecurity and overweight. In response, this study examined the association between food insecurity and child overweight status when these variables were measured for the same child using information on children (n = 1031) aged 10-15 y from the Three-City Study. Approximately 8% of the children were food insecure, whereas 50% were either at risk of overweight or overweight. Bivariate analyses indicated that there were no significant differences in the prevalence of at risk of overweight and overweight between food secure and food insecure children. Gender, race, and income showed similar patterns. Results from logistic regression analyses also indicated that the likelihood of being overweight or at risk of overweight was not significantly different for food secure and food insecure children. Although child-specific food insecurity was not associated with overweight in this sample of low-income children, food insecurity and overweight coexist among these low-income children, because approximately 25% of the food insecure children were overweight. Additional research is needed to explore the potential relationships between food insecurity and overweight and to better inform policy that attempts to address these issues among low-income households with children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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7. Differences in food insecurity between adults and children in Zimbabwe
- Author
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Kuku, Oluyemisi, Gundersen, Craig, and Garasky, Steven
- Subjects
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FOOD security , *ADULTS , *CHILDREN , *HOUSEHOLDS , *INTERVIEWING , *CHILD welfare , *FOOD supply , *FOOD industry - Abstract
Abstract: Food insecurity is a serious challenge facing millions of households across Africa. Within these households, distinguishing the incidence of food insecurity between adults and children is often difficult because most surveys rely on the reports of adults. In this paper, we address this shortcoming of previous work by using a survey from over 6000 households in Zimbabwe where interviews were conducted with both an adult caregiver and a child. Using two measures of food insecurity, we find that reports of adults and children differ within households with lower reports of food insecurity among children, with children in the youngest age groups particularly being protected from food shortages. An exception to this general rule, though, is in better-off households where children are often more likely to be food insecure than adults. Findings also demonstrate the need for multiple measures to comprehensively capture the full picture of food insecurity in the household. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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