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France

Government launches service to make deadbeat parents pay

Published:Wednesday | January 6, 2021 | 12:18 AM
French President Emmanuel Macron (left) meets employees at the headquarters of the local French family allowance public services in Tours, central France, yesterday.
French President Emmanuel Macron (left) meets employees at the headquarters of the local French family allowance public services in Tours, central France, yesterday.

PARIS (AP):

France is launching a new government service empowered to take money directly from the bank accounts of parents who fail to pay child support, aiming to help many families – the vast majority of whom are headed by single mothers – emerge from precarious financial situations.

President Emmanuel Macron denounced in a tweet unpaid child support as “an unbearable situation for hundreds of thousands of single parents”, before visiting a benefits agency Tuesday in Tours, in central France, which is providing the new service.

“Thank you” for the measure, a single mother of three told Macron, detailing at length her personal situation, involving domestic violence and harassment from her ex-husband and deep financial difficulties. “That’s a great relief,” she said.

The mothers who spoke with Macron didn’t provide their names because of privacy reasons.

French authorities estimate that between 30 per cent and 40 per cent of child support amounts are either not paid, only partially paid or paid too late – placing at least 300,000 families in financial insecurity.

Single parents represent one out of four families in France, 85 per cent of whom are mothers. A third are living under the poverty rate.