One in 14 U.S. Workers are Having Their Wages Garnished with Child Support and Student Loans as Leading Causes, According to
New ADP Research
Wage garnishment is mostly affecting middle-aged, middle-income men from the Midwest; Student and consumer debt are closing in
on child support as the top cause of garnished wages
ROSELAND, NJ--(Marketwired - Sep 27, 2017) - A new
study released today by the ADP Research Institute ® (ADPRI) examines the nuances of wage garnishment across the
country, and demonstrates how company size, industry, and location factor into the compliance complexities a business
faces.
Seven percent of Americans nationwide have their paychecks garnished, often leading to employee stress and costly compliance
issues for companies. Yet wage garnishments are not spread evenly across employees. The data shows that 26 percent of
men ages 35 to 55 working at large manufacturing jobs in the Midwest have their wages garnished. On average, this group
makes $44,000 a year and each has nearly two wage garnishments.
The ADPRI study is based on the 2016 anonymous pay data of 12 million U.S. workers, and studied four types of wage
garnishments: child support, tax levies, bankruptcy, and "other" general garnishments, such as student debt or consumer
loans. Wages typically are garnished by court order, with the amount of the garnishment deducted from an employee's salary
until a support obligation is satisfied or a debt, often with interest, costs and fees, is paid.
Of the four categories studied, child support is the most common wage garnishment (3 percent), followed by student debt or
consumer loans (2.9 percent), and tax levies (1.5 percent). Just 0.4 percent of U.S. employees have wages garnished due to
bankruptcy. Of those with garnishments, 12 percent of workers face multiple types of wage garnishment.
Strikingly, 71 percent of workers whose wages are garnished are men, overwhelmingly because of child support. Wage
garnishment for women typically is caused by student or consumer debt. In addition, middle-aged workers between the ages of
35 and 54 account for 62 percent of those with wage garnishments.
How Garnished Wages Affect Employers
The study also introduces a new metric useful to employers: average number of wage garnishments per employee. Nationally,
employees with garnished wages face on average 1.4 obligations. This figure rises in the Midwest, where those with garnished
wages carry 1.49 garnishments on average. In the Northeast, employees with garnished wages carry an average of 1.33
garnishments. The highest rate among states is in Virginia, where employees with garnished wages carry on average 1.6
garnishments.
Similar trends emerge among industries, where goods-producing companies see higher employee garnishment rates (10 percent)
than firms in the service sector (7 percent). The Midwest and Southern regions are heavily invested in goods-production, and
have proportionally higher numbers of employees with wage garnishments than other areas of the country.
In terms of company size, the study revealed a higher wage garnishment rate in larger companies, as well as a greater number
of employees carrying higher numbers of wage garnishments. Larger companies proportionally also have more employees with
student-related and consumer indebtedness. Employees of smaller companies are more likely to owe child support, according to
the research.
"Wage garnishment can have a profound effect on the employee who is being garnished, as well as the employer who must
implement and comply with the garnishment order and applicable regulations," said Julie Farraj, division vice president and
general manager of Wage Garnishments and Unemployment/Employment Verification Services for ADP Added Value Services. "It's
important for businesses of all sizes to understand the different types of wage garnishment, familiarize themselves with the laws
governing them, and learn ways to accurately and efficiently process them. The expanded view of wage garnishments outlined
in this new study may provide employers with greater insights into how garnishment may affect their workforce and
organizations."
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