Here are two more ways a partial government shutdown could affect Americans if it continues: millions won’t get food stamps and the economy will grow at a slower pace.

Economist Joe Brusuelas of RSM took a look at those two issues on Monday, before the Trump administration said benefits would be funded through February if the shutdown continues.

See:USDA says food stamps funded through February if shutdown continues.

Odds were growing that money to sufficiently fund the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or food stamps, would run out this month, the economist wrote. In human terms, wrote Brusuelas, 20 million low-income households and 40 million individuals would lose support.

And in terms of the broader economy? Brusuelas took the long view, arguing that if the shutdown extends to a year it would translate to losses of anywhere between .53% of gross domestic product to 1.03%.

The U.S. economy was only forecasted to grow 2.3% in 2019 by the Federal Reserve before the shutdown.

Brusuelas wrote that, assuming households spend all of the benefits available to them and that they wouldn’t be able to find extra funds to pay for those food expenses, the loss of SNAP spending by households implies a direct yearly loss to GDP of nearly $61 billion.

President Donald Trump last week floated the possibility of a yearlong shutdown at the White House with congressional leaders. “I don’t think it will, but I am prepared,” he told reporters Friday.

Tuesday night, Trump called illegal immigration a ‘crisis,’ but did not declare an emergency. In their response, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer accused the president of misrepresenting the situation on the border and urged him to reopen closed government departments.

The partial shutdown is now in its 19th day.

Also see:Government shutdown now ranks as the second longest in 40 years.