Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - SOCIAL SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - GRANTS TO STATES FOR AID AND SERVICES TO NEEDY FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN AND FOR CHILD-WELFARE SERVICES › Part Part D— - Child Support and Establishment of Paternity › § 658a
The Secretary must pay every State an annual incentive payment. The total money available each year comes from a national pool. For fiscal years 2000–2008 the pool amounts are: $422,000,000 (2000), $429,000,000 (2001), $450,000,000 (2002), $461,000,000 (2003), $454,000,000 (2004), $446,000,000 (2005), $458,000,000 (2006), $471,000,000 (2007), and $483,000,000 (2008). For later years, the pool equals the previous year’s pool multiplied by the percent that the Consumer Price Index (CPI-U, averaged for the 12 months ending September 30) rose compared with the year before that. Each State’s share = (that State’s incentive base amount) ÷ (sum of all States’ incentive base amounts). A State’s incentive base amount is the total of five performance pieces: paternity establishment, support orders, current payments, arrearage payments, and cost‑effectiveness. Each piece equals an “applicable percentage” (based on how well the State did on that measure) times a maximum base amount. The max base is the State collections base for paternity, support orders, and current payments, and 75% of the State collections base for arrearage and cost‑effectiveness. The State collections base = 2 × (collections in assigned cases) + (collections in other cases). A measure’s max base is zero unless an audit finds the State’s submitted data complete and reliable. The law uses step scales to turn each performance result into an applicable percentage (for example, 80% or higher on many measures gives 100%; low scores can give 0%). Collections a State gets for another State count for both States. The Secretary estimates payments before or at the start of the fiscal year and pays quarterly, adjusting later for any past overpayments or underpayments. The Secretary will make rules for the calculation and may exclude closed or out‑of‑jurisdiction cases. States must spend the full incentive payment to add to, not replace, other funds for running the approved program or for Secretary‑approved activities that improve the program.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 658a
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73