Publication | Closed Access
Child Support Obligations and Low‐Income Fathers
80
Citations
23
References
2005
Year
Family MedicineParental CareFamily InvolvementFamily StrengtheningFinancial ResponsibilityFamily RelationshipFamily InteractionChild CareObligation RateChild Support ObligationsFamily RelationshipsHealth SciencesSocial InequalityChild Well-beingMaternal HealthFamily PolicyChild DevelopmentChild Support ComplianceFamily EconomicsSociologyPediatricsFamily PsychologySocial PolicyMedicine
Using the 1994–1998 waves of the Current Population Survey—Child Support Supplement ( N = 5,387), the aims of this study are to document child support obligation rates of nonresident fathers, to examine the effect of the obligation rate on child support compliance, and to calculate the trade‐off between fathers’ financial responsibility and children's well‐being, paying particular attention to low‐income fathers. The results indicate that low‐income fathers have high child support obligation rates, which significantly reduce their child support compliance. Although lowering the obligation rate for these fathers may improve their compliance, it does not fully offset the lowered obligation amounts and leads to a 30% net payment loss for welfare mothers and a 43% loss for nonwelfare mothers. Policy implications are discussed.
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