Recent research on child support issues has been concerned with normative problems involvingthe distribution of welfare between divorced parents and their children as well as with the assess-ment of the behavioral responses of parents to child support orders and custody arrangements( see, e.g., Del Boca and Flinn (1995), GarÞnkel and Klawitter (1990), Bartfeldt and GarÞnkel(1996), Del Boca (1996), Del Boca and Ribero (1998), and Flinn (2000)). While there is bynow an extensive literature analyzing the effects of child support policies on monetary transfersof noncustodial parents and the extent of compliance with child support orders, little researchhas been done on the relationship between monetary transfers between parents and the divisionof the child™s time. While income transfers to the custodial parent are no doubt importantfor the child™s consumption and general well-being, there exists considerable empirical evidencesuggesting that the division of the child™s time between the parents has important e ffects on thechild™s welfare ( Beller and Graham (1993)).There have been few analyses of this relationship.Weiss and Willis (1985) provide one theoretical motivation for the positive relationship betweenthe noncustodial parent™s contact time with the child and their level of transfers. They claimthat increased contact time allows better monitoring of the custodial parent™s expenditures onthe child, which induces higher levels of transfers to the custodial parent.We have developed a model (Del Boca and Ribero ( 1999)) in which visitations and childsupport are the outcomes of a negotiation process whereby the father exchanges income forvisitation time. Institutional agents, such as judges, state legislatures, etc, can impact thewelfareofthemembersofthenonintactfamilybyalteringtheendowmentsofeachofthe1