Sunday 6 December 2009

NWT child & spousal support payments worst in Canada at 54 per cent.

Unpaid child and spousal support hits $2.5 billion

http://www.canada.com/news/Unpaid+child+spousal+support+hits+billion/2234045/story.html
 


Unpaid child and spousal support in Canada has risen by about $50 million each year since 2004, resulting in a Canada-wide total of $2.5 billion, Statistics Canada noted Tuesday.
 

Unpaid child and spousal support in Canada has risen by about $50 million each year since 2004, resulting in a Canada-wide total of $2.5 billion, Statistics Canada noted Tuesday.

Photograph by: David Gray, Reuters

OTTAWA — Unpaid child and spousal support now tops $2.5 billion across the country, according to a Statistics Canada survey released Tuesday.

The unpaid support has risen by about $50 million each year since 2004. The $2.5 billion figure is now equivalent to the cost of funding the Conservative government's Universal Child Care Benefit program.

The arrears have steadily accumulated over years, said Statistics Canada analyst Paul Robinson.

There are 400,000 support cases in Canada. In about two-thirds of those cases, there was money owed, which is unchanged from last year.

What has grown, said Robinson, is the amount of money owed by parents.

[...]

The survey found the highest percentage of parents fully complying with support was in Quebec, at 79 per cent. The lowest was in the Northwest Territories, at 54 per cent.© Copyright (c) Canwest News Service

-- - -  ----

see also

Child and Spousal Support: Maintenance Enforcement Survey Statistics

Product main page This publication contains statistical information on child and spousal support payments which are collected from maintenance enforcement programs (MEPs) across Canada. These programs, which exist in each province and territory, provide administrative assistance to recipients to help them collect their support payments. In March 2009, 400,000 cases were registered in the ten reporting MEPs.

http://www.statcan.gc.ca/bsolc/olc-cel/olc-cel?lang=eng&catno=85-228-X


Divorce: Guide to the latest information

Find the latest information on divorce from Statistics Canada, including publications and articles, data tables, and additional resources. This guide, developed by the librarians at Statistics Canada, is a selection of key resources and is not a complete list of our collection on this topic.


http://www.statcan.gc.ca/search-recherche/bb/info/3000016-eng.htm

No comments:

Post a Comment