Child support order and payment amounts have implications for the economic well-being of noncustodial parents, custodial parents, and children. Most noncustodial parents with a child support order pay part, but not the full amount of that order; likewise, most custodial parents who are owed child support receive some support, but not the full amount they are owed.

Comparison of CSPED Participants to National and State Child Support Caseloads
- Leslie Hodges
- Discussion Paper
- June 2019

Child Support Noncustodial Parent Employment Demonstration (CSPED): Findings from the Benefit-Cost Analysis
- Quinn Moore, Katherine Anne Magnuson, and April Yanyuan Wu
- Report
- March 2019

Maria Cancian and Dan Meyer on Final Results from the CSPED Impact Evaluation
- Maria Cancian and Daniel R. Meyer
- Podcasts
- March 2019

Potential Effects of a Self-Support Reserve in Wisconsin
- Maria Cancian, Molly Costanzo, Angela Guarin, Leslie Hodges, and Daniel R. Meyer
- Report
- March 2019

How are Child Support Burdens Related to Child Support Payments, Compliance, and Regularity?
- Leslie Hodges, Daniel R. Meyer, and Maria Cancian
- Report
- March 2019

Lenna Nepomnyaschy on the Role of Fathers in Reducing Inequality in Child Outcomes
- Lenna Nepomnyaschy
- Podcasts
- January 2019

States’ Treatment of High-Income Payers
- Molly Costanzo
- Report
- December 2018

County Performance and the Role of Incarceration
- Emma Frankham and Michael Massoglia
- Report
- July 2018