Report Finds Increase in Age and Education of Custodial Mothers
WASHINGTON, Nov. 9 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- About half (46.8 percent) of
parents owed child support in 2007 received the full amount, while nearly
one-third (29.5 percent) received only a portion of the total due and about
one-quarter (23.7 percent) received none of the child support they were owed,
according to a new national report from the U.S. Census Bureau.
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20090226/CENSUSLOGO)
Of the $34.1 billion total child support owed, 62.7 percent was reported as
received.
The report, Custodial Mothers and Fathers and Their Child Support: 2007,
focuses on the child support income that custodial parents reported receiving
from noncustodial parents living elsewhere, and other types of support, such
as health insurance and noncash assistance.
These data were collected in April 2008 as part of a special survey conducted
jointly by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Health and Human
Services' Administration for Children and Families, Office of Child Support
Enforcement.
"These figures show the importance of child support as income to families,
especially those in poverty," said Carmen R. Nazario, assistant secretary for
children and families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. "Our
primary interest is making sure that children get the financial and medical
support they need."
Among custodial parents, 24.6 percent had incomes below poverty, about twice
as high as the overall poverty rate for the total population (12.5 percent).
Among those who reported receiving child support, 18.2 percent were living in
poverty.
On average, custodial parents received $3,350 annually, or about $280 per
month, from the parents who owed support. Among custodial parents living below
poverty who received support, child support represented 47.9 percent of their
average income.
An estimated 13.7 million parents had custody of 21.8 million children under
21, while the other parent lived somewhere else. More than one-quarter (26.3
percent) of all children under 21 lived with only one parent.
Mothers accounted for the majority of custodial parents (82.6 percent), while
17.4 percent were fathers. One-third (34.2 percent) of custodial mothers had
never been married, compared with 20.9 percent of custodial fathers who had
never been married.
Custodial parents participating in the federal government's Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families (formerly Aid to Families with Dependent
Children) fell to 4.3 percent in 2007, down from 22.0 percent in 1993.
Among white, non-Hispanic children in families, 22.4 percent lived with a
custodial parent. The proportion of black children in families with a
custodial parent was 48.2 percent. Among children of other races, including
American Indians and Alaska Natives, and Asians and Pacific Islanders, 16.1
percent lived in a custodial-parent family. Approximately one-quarter (25.4
percent) of Hispanic children lived with a custodial parent.
Other findings:
-- The age of custodial mothers has increased over the past 14 years. In
1994, 25.4 percent were 40 years or older. In 2008, that proportion
had
grown to 39.1 percent. Meanwhile, the proportion of custodial mothers
younger than 30 decreased from 30.9 percent in 1994 to 25.8 percent in
2008.
-- The education level of custodial mothers increased over the past 14
years. In 1994, 22.2 percent of custodial mothers had less than a high
school education. In 2008, the proportion of custodial mothers who had
not graduated from high school had decreased to 15.5 percent.
-- Half (50.2 percent) of custodial mothers were white, non-Hispanic;
27.8
percent were black; and 18.0 percent were Hispanic. Custodial fathers
were more likely to be white, non-Hispanic (71.6 percent), while 11.4
percent were black, and 12.1 percent were Hispanic. The difference in
the percentages of custodial fathers who were black or Hispanic was
not
statistically significant.
-- A majority (81.7 percent) of the 6.4 million custodial parents due
child
support payments in 2007 had arrangements for joint child custody or
visitation privileges with the noncustodial parent.
-- The average individual 2007 income for the 1.5 million custodial
parents
who received no child support payments was $29,300. The average
individual 2007 income for the 4.9 million custodial parents who
received at least some of the support they were due was $34,100.
-- Of the 7.4 million custodial parents who had child support awards or
agreements in 2007, 56.6 percent of their agreements specified who was
to provide health insurance for their children. In 44.5 percent of
these, the absent parent provided the health insurance coverage.
-- At least one type of noncash support, such as gifts or coverage of
expenses, was received by 57.6 percent of all custodial parents on
behalf of their children. Custodial parents with a child support
agreement or award were more likely than those without awards to
receive
noncash support (61.5 percent and 52.9 percent, respectively).
The estimates in this report are from the 1994 through 2008 April biennial
supplements to the Current Population Survey and are subject to sampling and
nonsampling error.
Editor's note: The report can be accessed at
http://www.census.gov/prod/2009pubs/p60-237.pdf. Detailed tables can be
accessed at http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/childsupport/cs07.html.
SOURCE U.S. Census Bureau
Tom Edwards, Public Information Office, U.S. Census Bureau, +1-301-763-3030,
+1-763-3762 (fax), pio@census.gov