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Reform Child Maintenance Service

Conservative · what the evidence says

An independent, source-checked look at Conservative’s policy “Reform Child Maintenance Service” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.

Inequality & fair shares — Helps

minor · moderate confidence

Better enforcement of child maintenance payments would push more money toward lower-income single-parent households, modestly narrowing the income gap. The main caveat is that the reforms face implementation delays and uncertainty about whether compliance will actually improve at scale.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether consolidating to a single Collect and Pay service genuinely raises compliance rates, or — as some credible voices warn — produces poorer results than the current mixed model.

Our reading: Child maintenance is a redistributive cash transfer: money flows from non-resident (typically higher-earning) parents to single-parent households, which are disproportionately lower-income. The baseline evidence shows a large compliance gap — nearly half of Direct Pay recipients do not receive what they are owed on time, and £772.9 million has accumulated in arrears since 2012. Stronger enforcement powers (liability orders, licence revocations) and the shift to a supervised Collect and Pay model directly target this gap. If compliance improves, more money reaches lower-income households, narrowing the income gap at the bottom — a clear O14 improvement. The poverty-reduction evidence from IPPR and government data (120,000–140,000 children kept out of poverty) anchors this: the mechanism is not theoretical, it is already operating; the policy's marginal effect is to strengthen it. The domestic abuse measures reinforce the distributional gain, because abuse survivors are disproportionately low-income women who lose out when maintenance is weaponised against them. Counterfactual: absent the reforms, the existing compliance gap persists and the arrears stock grows, meaning the distributional gain is genuinely additional. The main uncertainty is whether the consolidation to a single Collect and Pay service will raise or lower overall compliance — a Lords committee raised credible concerns and recommended the government publish supporting evidence. That dampens confidence and caps magnitude at minor rather than moderate. Implementation delays to 2027–28 push the effect toward the latter half of a parliament. Overall, the weight of cited evidence supports a modest improvement in the income gap, driven by better enforcement of an already-redistributive mechanism.

Cost of living — Helps

moderate · moderate confidence

Cracking down on unpaid child maintenance would put more money directly into the pockets of single-parent households — some of the most financially stretched families in the UK. The main caveat is that key reforms won't kick in until 2027–28, and their real-world compliance impact is contested.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether consolidating to a single Collect and Pay service actually raises compliance rates, or whether — as the Lords and stakeholder groups fear — it produces poorer results and penalises some families with fees.

Our reading: The core cost-of-living relevance here is straightforward: unpaid child maintenance is a direct income shortfall for single-parent households, who are disproportionately low-income. Nearly £773 million in arrears since 2012 and only 60% of Direct Pay recipients getting what they are owed quantify the scale of the problem. Child maintenance already keeps around 120,000 children out of poverty annually; any meaningful uplift in compliance would extend that effect further into lower-income households. The policy attacks non-compliance from two angles. First, stronger enforcement tools — liability orders, property sales, passport and licence revocations — raise the cost of non-payment for paying parents, which should improve recovery rates. Second, consolidating onto a single Collect and Pay service increases oversight and allows faster action on missed payments. Both are plausible mechanisms for improving disposable income for receiving households. For domestic abuse victims — a large share of CMS users (58% of new applicants disclosed abuse) — improved access to Collect and Pay without needing the abuser's consent directly addresses a mechanism of economic coercion. This is a targeted but real cost-of-living improvement for a vulnerable group. However, two material caveats reduce confidence. First, the reforms are not expected to be legislated until 2027–28, so there is no immediate relief. Second, the Lords and stakeholders question whether ending Direct Pay will actually improve compliance or simply burden receiving parents with fees, potentially worsening their net position. This genuine expert disagreement prevents a 'high' confidence rating but does not overturn the direction of effect: the enforcement tools and abuse protections are additive gains even if the Direct Pay consolidation is contested. On balance, the evidence supports a moderate improvement in cost of living for single-parent households, felt in the long term.

Crime, justice & national security — Helps

minor · moderate confidence

This policy strengthens protections for domestic abuse victims using the Child Maintenance Service and gives authorities new powers to refer financial coercers to prosecutors, modestly improving justice for affected families. The main caveat is that key measures are not expected to be in place until 2027–28, and some expert bodies are unconvinced that moving to a single payment service will reliably improve compliance.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether consolidating to a single Collect and Pay service actually raises compliance rates, which Lords committees and some stakeholders dispute, will determine whether enforcement gains are real or illusory.

Our reading: O5 covers safety, justice functioning, and protection from harm including domestic abuse. This policy has two distinct channels relevant to O5. First, it strengthens the justice-and-safety dimension for domestic abuse victims: new CPS referral powers, automatic Collect and Pay access without abuser consent, and trauma-informed staff training directly address a documented vulnerability — nearly 6 in 10 new CMS applicants disclose domestic abuse, and maintenance is used as a tool of economic coercion by one in ten abusers. These measures modestly improve the justice system's response to a real harm. Second, tougher enforcement tools (licence revocations, passport confiscations, liability orders) address a £772.9m arrears backlog and a documented non-payment problem, improving justice delivery for receiving parents. The main constraints on magnitude are: (1) key implementation is not expected until 2027–28, so effects are not immediate; (2) the Lords committee raised credible doubts about whether consolidating to a single Collect and Pay service will actually raise compliance — this is a genuine contested projection, not a fringe view. The domestic abuse channel is better evidenced than the compliance channel, but neither is transformative at national scale relative to O5's broader indicators (crime rates, court backlogs, national security). The direction is a genuine minor improvement to justice functioning and victim safety, but the evidence base and implementation timeline prevent a higher magnitude rating.