Research-based guidance for parents navigating divorce in the New Bedford area and across Southeastern Massachusetts
Key takeaway: Research spanning three decades consistently documents that children of divorce face significant economic disadvantages relative to children from intact households—disadvantages that are traceable to reduced household income, child support inadequacy, and the financial instability of custodial parents. But research also identifies what parents can do to mitigate these effects.
When couples with children divorce, they are not only dissolving a marriage—they are restructuring the economic household that supports those children’s development. Three decades of research in economics, sociology, and developmental psychology have traced the financial consequences of parental divorce for children in granular detail, from immediate household income reductions to long-term effects on educational attainment, career trajectories, and intergenerational economic mobility.
For parents navigating divorce in the New Bedford area and across Southeastern Massachusetts, understanding what the research says about these consequences—and what factors most powerfully mitigate them—is essential preparation for making decisions that protect their children’s futures.
The Foundational Research: Children’s Economic Wellbeing After Divorce
Teachman and Paasch’s foundational 1994 analysis established the core research framework for understanding divorce’s economic effects on children. Their central finding was that children’s economic wellbeing after divorce is inextricably linked to the economic wellbeing of their custodial parent—predominantly the mother—and that the income decline experienced by custodial mothers flows directly and materially into diminished resources for children.
“The economic well-being of children following divorce is tied closely to the economic well-being of their custodial parent, most often the mother, and declines in her income translate directly into constraints on children’s resources.”
— Teachman and Paasch, The Future of Children (1994)
The mechanism is straightforward: two adults maintaining one household can provide for children more efficiently than two adults maintaining two separate households on the same total income. The “divorce tax” on household resources—the duplication of housing, utilities, and household infrastructure—reduces the total resources available to children even when total family income remains constant. When total income also declines, as it frequently does for custodial mothers, the resource reduction compounds.
Child Support: The Research on Adequacy and Compliance
Child support systems are designed to maintain the non-custodial parent’s financial contribution to children’s households. Research on child support adequacy and compliance, however, reveals a persistent gap between the theoretical contribution and the actual one.
Research finding: Federal data consistently show that only approximately half of all child support due is actually paid in full. A significant proportion of custodial parents receive nothing—either because no order exists, because the non-custodial parent is unable to pay, or because enforcement is inadequate. The children most economically vulnerable to this gap are those in lower-income households where child support represents a larger fraction of total household income.
Teachman and Paasch’s analysis documented that child support, even when paid in full, typically replaces only a portion of the economic contribution a resident father would make to household expenses—and that the gap is largest in households where the non-custodial parent’s income is limited. The economic protection that child support provides is real but partial.
Educational Attainment: The Intergenerational Effect
Among the most consequential long-term economic effects of parental divorce is its impact on children’s educational attainment. Multiple longitudinal studies find that children of divorce complete fewer years of education on average than children from intact families, and that this educational gap translates into lower lifetime earnings and reduced intergenerational economic mobility.
The mechanisms behind this educational effect are multiple. Reduced household income limits access to educational resources, tutoring, enrichment activities, and ultimately college. Residential instability following divorce—moving between households, changing schools, losing peer networks—disrupts educational progress directly. And the psychological effects of divorce, including depression and anxiety, impair the concentration and academic engagement that school success requires.
Housing Instability as a Compounding Factor
Research documents that children of divorce experience elevated rates of residential mobility following parental separation—moving to less expensive housing, changing school districts, and losing established community ties. Housing instability is independently associated with poor academic outcomes, behavioral problems, and disrupted peer relationships. In housing markets like those in many Southeastern Massachusetts communities, where affordable housing is scarce, the housing consequences of divorce can be particularly acute for lower-income custodial parents and their children.
What Protects Children’s Economic Wellbeing After Divorce
The research identifies several factors that substantially mitigate divorce’s economic consequences for children.
Economic Stability of the Custodial Parent
The single most powerful protective factor is the economic stability of the custodial parent. Research by Amato found that children’s outcomes are far better predicted by the financial security of the household they primarily inhabit than by the formal structure of the custody arrangement. Settlement decisions that prioritize the custodial parent’s long-term financial stability—including fair alimony, careful retirement asset division, and realistic child support—directly protect children’s economic futures.
Parental Conflict Reduction
High parental conflict following divorce is associated with poor academic performance and behavioral problems in children independent of economic effects. Families who reduce interparental conflict after separation allow children to maintain the psychological stability necessary for academic engagement—one of the most powerful protectors against educational disadvantage.
Continued Paternal Economic Involvement
Research documents that children fare better economically when non-custodial fathers remain financially and practically engaged—not only through child support payments but through direct provision of educational resources, school supplies, extracurricular activities, and college savings. Arrangements that support continued paternal involvement, rather than adversarial ones that create disengagement, produce better economic outcomes for children.
“The research on children and divorce finance is sobering, but it’s not fatalistic. The families I work with who do the best financially—for themselves and for their children—are the ones who approach settlement with the long game in mind. What does this family need to function well for the next fifteen years? That’s a very different question than ‘what am I entitled to?’, and mediation is designed to help people ask it.”
— Divorce mediator Attorney Julia Rueschemeyer, Amherst Divorce Mediation
References
- Teachman, Jay D., and Kathleen M. Paasch. “Financial impact of divorce on children and their families.” The Future of Children (1994): 63–83.
- U.S. Census Bureau. “Child Support and Alimony: 2018.” Current Population Reports, P60-262.
- McLanahan, Sara, and Gary Sandefur. Growing Up with a Single Parent: What Hurts, What Helps. Harvard University Press, 1994.
- South, Scott J., and Eric P. Baumer. “Deciphering community and race effects on adolescent premarital childbearing.” Social Forces 78.4 (2000): 1379–1408.
- Amato, Paul R. “Children of divorce in the 1990s: An update of the Amato and Keith (1991) meta-analysis.” Journal of Family Psychology 15.3 (2001): 355–370.
