Threads / Child Maintenance Enforcement Acceleration / Low-income paying parents are more likely to build up child…
Written Evidence Published 22 Jun 2022 ↗ View on Parliament

Low-income paying parents are more likely to build up child maintenance arrears than those who are higher paid: 46% of paying parents using the CMS did not earn enough to pay income tax (£12,570 in 2021–22), but these parents represented 62% of those with arrears as at March 2021 .Alongside making enforcement more challenging, we received written evidence from a number of non-resident parents who told us about distress and hardship they had experienced being asked for amounts they considered ...

Low-income paying parents are more likely to build up child maintenance arrears than those who are higher paid: 46% of paying parents using the CMS did not earn enough to pay income tax (£12,570 in 2021–22), but these parents represented 62% of those with arrears as at March 2021 .Alongside making enforcement more challenging, we received written evidence from a number of non-resident parents who told us about distress and hardship they had experienced being asked for amounts they considered to be 50 C&AG’s Report, paras 21–22, 2.20 51 Q66; C&AG’s Report, para 2.20 52 Qq 70, 73–74 53 Qq 69–70; C&AG’s Report, para 2.22 54 Q 67 55 Q 32; C&AG’s Type: conclusion | Number: 27 | Response status: not_addressed Government response: 7. PAC conclusion: The Department’s ability to collect child maintenance is limited by the affordability of payments and the system risks creating a poverty trap for some Paying Parents. 7. PAC recommendation: As part of its Treasury Minute response, the Departmen