Guide

Impact of Federal Cuts to Social Safety Net in Georgia

Families across Georgia are working hard to stay afloat — paying more for everything from groceries to rent to health care. But the looming federal budget cuts will have an outsize effect on our state because federal funding is essential to supporting the basic needs of many Georgians. Unfortunately, Georgia is home to some of the highest rates of poverty, child hunger and housing insecurity: 30% of the state is low-income (makes less than 200% of the federal poverty level), 20% of children face hunger, and 35.4% of adults are at risk of eviction.

Federal funding is critically important to ensure everyone has access to necessities like health care, food and nutrition, housing and public education. In FY 2022, Georgia received $23.4 billion in federal funds (36.1% of the state’s revenue). Federal funds accounts for 66% of the state’s Medicaid budget and 16.1% of the state’s budget for public education. The federal government pays for 100% of the benefits paid, and 50% of the administration of SNAP and 100% of housing assistance benefits.

Federal cuts would strip away health care coverage

Medicaid provides health care coverage for 1 in 5 Americans, allowing millions of people access to lifesaving prescriptions, complex medical treatments, preventive services, long-term care and other essential health care. Protecting people with low incomes from high medical costs reduces the risks of being pushed further into poverty and builds healthier communities. Medicaid is a popular, inexpensive and comprehensive program that keeps families from falling deeper into poverty.

Georgia Medicaid facts

# of people enrolled in Medicaid2 million
% of GA population covered by Medicaid/CHIP18%
% of Medicaid paid for by the federal government66%
Children covered by Medicaid2 in 5
% of births in GA covered by Medicaid46%
% of nonelderly Medicaid enrollees that are POC69%

Federal cuts would take food and nutrition away from families

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) is our nation’s most effective tool in the fight against hunger, reaching 1.41 million children, older people, veterans and working parents in Georgia. The evidence is clear: SNAP reduces poverty and improves education, health and economic outcomes.

Georgia SNAP facts

Average household receives$262/month
Total $ received$272 million
# of people helped by SNAP1.41 million
% of population receiving SNAP13%
SNAP-authorized retailers at risk of losing revenue9,800
Child hunger rate20%
% of SNAP participants who have children47%
% of SNAP households who have older adults or people who are disabled28%
% of people who do not have enough to eat12%

Federal cuts would dismantle public education

Proposals to eliminate and defund the Department of Education will have devastating impacts on children of all races and ethnicities. Gutting federal education funding will make it impossible to abide by formula and competitive grants specified in law, evaporate existing data collection processes, and allow schools to ignore anti-discrimination requirements.

Georgia Education Facts

# public school students (FY22)1.8 million
# of public schools in the state (FY20-21)2,311
# of Title I eligible schools (FY20-21)1,636 (71%)
Fed $ in Title I funding (FY25)$598.3 million
% K-12 students receiving services under IDEA (FY 22-23)13%
Fed IDEA $ (FY25)$455.1 million
% education funds from the federal government (FY 21-22)16.1%
Fed $ per pupil received (FY 21-22)$2,600
$ GA spends per pupil in average daily attendance (FY 20-21)$14,661

Federal cuts will push more families deeper into housing insecurity

More than half of this country spends more than 30% of their income on housing. Federal rental assistance is another lifeline for 10 million people — including older people, people with disabilities, veterans and working families — helping them keep a roof over their heads.  Cutting these programs, as has been proposed in the past, would put millions at risk of losing their homes, and their futures. 

Georgia Housing Stats

# of people in GA who use federal rental assistance291,000
Federal rental assistance $ provided to GA in 2023$1.2 billion
% of adults not current in rent or eviction likely35.4%
# people displaced from home because of disasters138,474

Georgia will likely suffer a significant budget deficit with the hundreds of billions of proposed cuts to Medicaid, SNAP, public education and other key programs. The sheer number of cuts required inevitably means people will lose health insurance, have more trouble putting food on the table and need to make hard decisions about whether to seek care or buy food, or pay rent.