Currently enacted child support guidelines primarily focus on maintaining children\u27s economic well-being when a single household is split into two. This article argues that this focus discounts another consideration which, when combined with the current analysis, could further advance children\u27s well-being: the ability of parents to pay. An analysis of payment characteristics demonstrates that lower child support obligations may increase the amount of child support paid on average. Lowering presumptive obligations will make lower-income parents better able and more likely to pay their obligations, thereby increasing the amount of child support paid to lower-income children, while at most only marginally decreasing the amount of suppor...
This article argues that the recovery of child support is a vital aspect of ensuring children’s soci...
thank Jerry Hage and Harriet Presser for comments on an earlier version of this paper; the authors r...
This paper describes the current position regarding private financial support of children whose pare...
Currently enacted child support guidelines primarily focus on maintaining children\u27s economic wel...
This paper examines how U.S. child support policy validates traditional divisions of labor and there...
Current child support laws are based on flawed assumptions about families that fail to reflect famil...
Given that the importance of child support increases with the decline of the traditional family, it...
This article describes existing child support practice in the United States, giving attention to the...
This article examines the roots of the disproportionate values the legal system assigns to paternal ...
The Child Support Guidelines, incentivized by federal law, provide rebuttable guidance for setting c...
This Article examines the government policy of seeking reimbursement of welfare costs through child ...
Child-support awards constitute an important source of revenue for many single-parent households. Th...
In theory, child support is an amount of money payable by one parent to the other to make sure that ...
Providing for the needs of children of separated parents lies at the heart of state child support la...
Any child support regime necessarily makes policy choices about how parental income should be shared...
This article argues that the recovery of child support is a vital aspect of ensuring children’s soci...
thank Jerry Hage and Harriet Presser for comments on an earlier version of this paper; the authors r...
This paper describes the current position regarding private financial support of children whose pare...
Currently enacted child support guidelines primarily focus on maintaining children\u27s economic wel...
This paper examines how U.S. child support policy validates traditional divisions of labor and there...
Current child support laws are based on flawed assumptions about families that fail to reflect famil...
Given that the importance of child support increases with the decline of the traditional family, it...
This article describes existing child support practice in the United States, giving attention to the...
This article examines the roots of the disproportionate values the legal system assigns to paternal ...
The Child Support Guidelines, incentivized by federal law, provide rebuttable guidance for setting c...
This Article examines the government policy of seeking reimbursement of welfare costs through child ...
Child-support awards constitute an important source of revenue for many single-parent households. Th...
In theory, child support is an amount of money payable by one parent to the other to make sure that ...
Providing for the needs of children of separated parents lies at the heart of state child support la...
Any child support regime necessarily makes policy choices about how parental income should be shared...
This article argues that the recovery of child support is a vital aspect of ensuring children’s soci...
thank Jerry Hage and Harriet Presser for comments on an earlier version of this paper; the authors r...
This paper describes the current position regarding private financial support of children whose pare...