Affiliation:
1. Columbia University
2. Manpower Demonstration Research Corporation
3. Princeton University
4. University of California, Riverside
Abstract
This article provides information on the effectiveness of state child support enforcement systems. We use individual level datafrom the Child Support Supplements of the Current Population Sur veys (1978-1992) to create an index of state effectiveness that captures success at securing child support awards, setting award levels, and collecting obligations. We identify states that were performing above or below the national average in the late 1980s to early 1990s and states that showed substantial improvement or decline in child support effectiveness during the 1980s. Identifying successful states will help researchers to determine what policies and practices are associated with successful enforcement. These variations in state effectiveness also suggest that low levels of child support are not due to deadbeat dads alone but also to inept states.
Subject
General Social Sciences,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
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4. Child support and child well-being.,1994
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