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Letter of transmittal
A. 1 Background to the Review
A. 2 Terms of Reference
A. 3 Approach of the Taskforce
A. 4 A new child support formula for Australia
A. 5 Assessing the costs of children
A. 6 Taking account of regular contact and shared care
A. 7 Ensuring parents meet their obligations to their children
A. 8 Helping parents to agree
A. 9 Other issues
A. 10 Expected outcomes from the reforms
A. 11 Recommendations
1. Establishment of the Child Support Review
2. The Evolution of the Child Support Scheme
3. The Formula for Assessment of Child Support
4. The Interaction of Child Support with Government Payments to Families
5. Evaluating the Scheme in operation
6. Issues with the Current Scheme
7. Principles for a New Child Support Formula
8. The Costs of Children
9. A New Formula for Assessing Child Support
10. Improving Assessment and Enforcement of Child Support
11. Child Support and the Maintenance Income Test
12. Change of Assessment
13. Child Support Agreements
14. Child Support and Re-Establishment Costs After Relationships Break Down
15. Child Support and the Family Relationship Centres
16. Modelling the Outcomes of the Proposed Formula
17. Other Issues Related to Administration of the Scheme
18. In the Best Interests of Children
Appendix 1: Definitions and abbreviations
Appendix 2: Membership of the Taskforce and Reference Group
References
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In the Best Interests of Children
Child Support
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In the Best Interests of Children - Reforming the Child Support Scheme - Report of the Ministerial Taskforce on Child Support
May 2005
The full report from the Ministerial Taskforce on Child Support
Alternative Format
Report of the Ministerial Taskforce PDF [1.4 MB]
Table of contents
Letter of transmittal
PART A: Overview
Background to the Review
Terms of Reference
Approach of the Taskforce
A new child support formula for Australia
Assessing the costs of children
Taking account of regular contact and shared care
Ensuring parents meet their obligations to their children
Helping parents to agree
Other issues
Expected outcomes from the reforms
Recommendations
PART B: Background and Analysis
Establishment of the Child Support Review
1.1
How the Taskforce conducted the Review
1.2
What was not in the Terms of Reference
1.3
The context of the Child Support Review—reforming the family law system
1.4
Explanation of terminology
The Evolution of the Child Support Scheme
2.1
The issue of poverty in sole-parent households
2.2
Introduction in 1988 of the Child Support Scheme
2.3
Design of the Scheme
2.4
Reviews since the Scheme’s commencement
2.5
Changes since the Scheme’s commencement
The Formula for Assessment of Child Support
3.1
The process
3.2
Primacy of a parent’s responsibility to their own children
3.3
The basic formula
3.4
Definition of income
3.5
Care of children
3.6
Minimum and maximum amounts
3.7
The basic formula in operation
3.8
When the payer has other children to support
3.9
Payer with children with different carers
3.10
Carers with children of different liable parents
3.11
When the child is not being cared for by either parent
3.12
Treatment where both parents have care of their children
3.13
Shared care
3.14
When child support ends
3.15
Variation to assessments
3.16
Agreements
3.17
Changes of assessment
3.18
Appeal and review
The Interaction of Child Support with Government Payments to Families
4.1
The family payment system
4.2
Interaction of FTB with child support
4.3
Income support
4.4
2005–06 Budget measures
Evaluating the Scheme in operation
5.1
Financial impacts of the Scheme
5.2
Concerns about the Scheme
5.3
Compliance with child support obligations
Issues with the Current Scheme
6.1
Child support expenditure as a percentage of income
6.2
The Child Support Scheme and capacity to meet the costs of children
6.3
Child support expenditure and the ages of children
6.4
The Child Support Scheme and the costs of contact
6.5
Regular contact and Family Tax Benefit
6.6
Numbers of payers who have a minimum assessment
6.7
Non-lodgment of tax returns
6.8
Second families
6.9
The need for major change
Principles for a New Child Support Formula
7.1
No change to the fundamentals of the Scheme
7.2
Including both parents’ incomes in the calculation of child support
7.3
Changes in patterns of parenting after separation
7.4
Assessing the fairness of a child support formula
7.5
Gross or net income
7.6
Principles for a redesigned Child Support Scheme
7.7
Explanation of the principles
7.8
Trade-offs between principles
The Costs of Children
8.1
Relevance of the costs of children
8.2
Equivalence scales and estimation of the cost of children
8.3
Expenditure Survey approach
8.4
Budget Standards approach
8.5
Literature review
8.6
Taskforce estimates of the costs of children
8.7
The net costs of children
8.8
Larger families
8.9
Children in different age groups
8.10
Very high income families
8.11
Costs for separated families
8.12
Costs of contact
PART C: Detailed Recommendations
A New Formula for Assessing Child Support
9.1
Overview of the proposed new formula
9.2
The income-shares approach
9.3
The measurement of income
9.4
The self-support amount
9.5
The Costs of Children Table
9.6
Determining a parent’s contribution to the costs of children
9.7
Regular contact and shared care
9.8
Splitting FTB
9.9
Determining the parenting arrangements
9.10
Variations on the basic formula
9.11
Minimum and fixed payments
9.12
Non-lodgment of tax returns
Improving Assessment and Enforcement of Child Support
10.1
Enforcement by the Child Support Agency
10.2
Court enforcement by payees
10.3
Powers of courts determining child support matters
10.4
Rights to seek CSA collection
10.5
Overpayments
10.6
Designated payments
Child Support and the Maintenance Income Test
11.1
The rationale for the Maintenance Income Test
11.2
Problems with the MIT
11.3
The neutrality principle
11.4
The terminology of maintenance
11.5
Reasonable maintenance action
11.6
Eligibility for income support of child support payers
Change of Assessment
12.1
The current change of assessment process and reasons
12.2
Limiting retrospectivity
12.3
Streamlining jurisdiction for court-ordered departures
12.4
High costs of contact
12.5
Overtime and second jobs
12.6
Recognition of responsibility for step-children
12.7
‘Capacity to earn’
12.8
Reviewing change of assessment processes
Child Support Agreements
13.1
The importance of encouraging agreements
13.2
Agreements under the existing Scheme
13.3
The requirement of Centrelink approval
13.4
Centrelink approval as a safeguard
13.5
Protecting the taxpayer
13.6
A discretion to refuse registration
13.7
Other issues
13.8
Reforming the rules concerning child support agreements
Child Support and Re-Establishment Costs After Relationships Break Down
14.1
The issue of re-establishment costs
14.2
Taking account of re-establishment costs under the formula
14.3
Re-establishment costs and the use of lump sum child support
14.4
Overcoming the obstacles to lump sum child support
14.5
Lump sum child support as providing a credit balance
14.6
The need for legal advice
14.7
Administration of agreements or orders for lump sum payments
14.8
Jurisdiction to make lump sum child support orders
14.9
Crediting of other in-kind payments by consent
Child Support and the Family Relationship Centres
15.1
Interactions between child support, family law and parental conflict
15.2
The role of Family Relationship Centres
15.3
How Family Relationship Centres may contribute to the understanding of and compliance with the Child Support Scheme
15.4
Collaboration between Family Relationship Centres, the CSA, Centrelink and other organisations
15.5
Family Relationship Centres and change of assessment
Modelling the Outcomes of the Proposed Formula
16.1
The modelling tool
16.2
Child support outcomes by income level
16.3
Effective marginal tax rates
16.4
Contributions to the cost of the child
16.5
Cameo illustrations of the operation of the formula
Other Issues Related to Administration of the Scheme
17.1
Suspension while parents are reconciled
17.2
External review
17.3
Revision of the legislation
17.4
Transition
17.5
Public education campaign
17.6
The courts and the costs of children and young adults
17.7
Research and monitoring
17.8
Currency of the Scheme
PART D: Conclusion
In the Best Interests of Children
18.1
Outcomes of the proposed changes to the formula
18.2
The Child Support Scheme and the Best Interests of Children
18.3
Reforming the Child Support Scheme—a matter of principle
References
Appendices
Appendix 1: Definitions and abbreviations
Appendix 2: Membership of the Taskforce and Reference Group
ISBN (Main Report): 1 920 85187 9
ISBN (Set): 1 920 85188 7
Third Printing
© Commonwealth of Australia 2005
This work is copyright. Apart from any use as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part may be reproduced by any process without prior written permission from the Commonwealth available from the Commonwealth Copyright Administration, Attorney-General’s Department. Requests and inquiries concerning reproduction and rights should be addressed to the Commonwealth Copyright Administration, Attorney-General’s, Robert Garran Offices, National Circuit,
Canberra ACT 2600 or posted at the
Attorney-General’s website
(http://www.ag.gov.au/cca)
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