Add to Google Reader or Homepage

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Minority Report of the Georgia Commission on Child Support

Submitted to Georgia Governor Zell Miller
July 1, 1998
by R. Mark Rogers
Introductory Comment
Georgia has a peculiar model of child support guidelines. Reasonably, however,
Georgia’s guidelines are based on a percentage of income that varies according to the number of
children. But oddly, just the non-custodial parent’s income is considered and, even stranger, the
percentage is fixed for all levels of income and on a before-tax basis. In complete contrast to all
known economic studies on consumer spending behavior, application of Georgia’s guidelines
leads to the curious result that a non-custodial parent’s child support obligation rises as a share of
after-tax income. In turn, after-tax obligations become bizarrely high. For example, a before-tax
obligation for two children of 25 percent of obligor income translates into about a 40 percent
after-tax obligation for moderately high incomes.
Only about a dozen states use a percent of obligor-only income model. Even fewer use
one on a before-tax basis as Georgia does. Additionally, some of these states use an obligor-only
model that severely restricts application to a ceiling level of child support award. Georgia is one
of less than a handful of states that use such a simplistic, before-tax, income-of-obligor-only
model as it does. Notably and in contrast, about thirty-five states base their child support
guidelines on both parents’ income and have presumptive awards that decline as percentages of
combined income and take into account special needs at the poverty level. Curiously, the
Federal Advisory Panel on Child Support recommended against using the type of guidelines that
Georgia adopted in 1989 and currently uses. Curiously, Georgia’s guidelines go against the
recommendations of those conducting the original economic study allegedly underlying
Georgia’s guidelines. In contrast to popular myth, in most situations Georgia’s guidelines have
been shown statistically to leave the non-custodial parent with a lower standard of living than the
custodial parent household.
The Minority agrees, as discussed below, with the vast majority of attorneys surveyed for
this Commission that Georgia’s child support guidelines should be changed.
The report, as a PDF, can be found here:

No comments:

Post a Comment