Campus News

New research on ‘deadbeat dads’ offers clues to improve children’s well-being

Skira
Meghan Skira

“Deadbeat dads” or absent fathers who don’t pay child support are an important contributing factor to child poverty rates. New research from UGA and Boston College helps explain why.

A team of economic researchers analyzed data on families across a 14-year period in an effort to understand why some single women had children outside of marriage when they received little to no support from fathers and why that behavior is especially common among African-Americans. Toward that end, the authors created an economic model to simulate a scenario in which every absent father was forced to pay child support. Looking at the data through the lens of this “perfect enforcement” scenario caused the picture to change.

“In the world we look at from 1979-1993, men can avoid paying child support. They can be deadbeat dads, and women know this is possible. Women know there’s a probability that they will get some kind of support and a possibility that they won’t,” said Meghan Skira, an assistant professor of economics in UGA’s Terry College of Business and research co-author. “Under perfect enforcement, there’s a big disincentive for men to have children outside of marriage because they now have a financial obligation they can’t avoid.”

When men are less willing to father children outside of marriage, the overall number of children born to unwed mothers declines, she said.

“For women, what you’ve done is said if you have a child outside of marriage or if you divorce, you’re going to receive child support with certainty. So, in some ways, you might not expect births outside of marriage to decline. It depends on which of these effects plays out,” Skira said. “But we find the disincentive effect wins out, and many individuals do not have children outside of marriage. They don’t stop altogether, but there is a big reduction.”

Their research doesn’t offer exact guidelines on how child support enforcement could be improved, Skira said. It explains how decisions would change under perfect child support enforcement and helps to understand the economic forces underlying single motherhood and deadbeat fatherhood.

Fewer children born outside of marriage slows the slide into poverty. But it doesn’t disappear completely. In fact, the authors’ research shows that removing another obstacle is a greater tool for child poverty reduction.

That obstacle is the racial earnings gap. When black men earn as much money as otherwise similar white men, the accompanying changes in behavior greatly reduce child poverty, Skira said.

“What we find is that because the racial earnings gap for men is particularly large, it matters quite a bit,” Skira said. “It affects not only the amount of income available to a person, but it also influences whether someone marries or not, whether or not they have a child, and, if they do, what resources are available to the child.”

This is because one benefit of getting married is the ability to share resources; if men don’t make much money, there is a smaller incentive to get married. Plus, there is less money to pay support.

The earnings gap may lead directly to nonpayment of child support.

“Our results suggest that a large reason why men don’t provide support is that they don’t have the means,” Skira said. “Some are just too poor.”