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Reducing Abortions: It’s the Economy, Stupid
It seems the cat’s finally out of the bag these days: conservatives aren’t just concerned with saving the babies from abortions when it comes to reproductive rights. They are now outspoken about being against access to contraception — and some of them have even come out against non-procreative sex. Women’s rights activists have long warned that they were coming for our birth control; now it’s hard to deny they were right all along.
One big clue this whole time has been a simple fact: if conservatives are so hell-bent on preventing abortions, one of the best things they can do is support family planning services and access to contraception. Yet the last time we saw an openly pro-family planning Republican was the ’80s, when George H.W. Bush was in office. Meanwhile, all Republican 2012 candidates have signed personhood pledges that endanger many forms of contraception, Santorum himself has said birth control is bad, and I’ve lost track of how many times Republicans have tried to defund Planned Parenthood, which supplies contraception to low-income women. But as Irin Carmon laid out, the connection between increasing access to contraception and lowering abortion rates is very clear.
Congressional Hearing on Contraception (AP)
There’s another clue that this isn’t about saving the babies. It’s the blind eye conservatives have turned to the economic factors that are leading more women to turn to abortion. A new report, “Abortionomics: When Choice is a Necessity,” shows that “lower incomes and rising unemployment are affecting Americans’ choices about pregnancies,” and in the recession abortion rates, particularly among poor women, are on the rise. Stephanie Poggi of the National Network of Abortion Funds says, “A lot of women are… telling us, ‘I’ve already put off paying my rent, my electric bill; I’m cutting back on my food.’ They’ve run through all the options.” In lean times, a child can seem like an overwhelming expense.
It’s not terribly shocking that when incomes are strapped, millions are out of a job, and many are falling into poverty, women are thinking twice about having a child. Raising a kid in this country is not a cheap undertaking. For a two-parent couple making under $57,600, the USDA estimates the costs of raising a young child to be $10,950 a year. The total cost of taking care of that child until he or she turns 18 averaged $226,920 in 2010, up nearly 40 percent over the last decade. As one woman in the report puts it, “I totally cannot afford another child. I knew immediately [upon learning about her pregnancy] what I had to do.”
Those without a job don’t have the income to cover these kinds of expenses. Over 12 million people are unemployed right now; almost 6 million of those are women. One unemployed woman in the report who chose abortion says, “At this time I am not working and neither is my partner… We are unable to support a child under our present circumstances.” If Republicans are concerned about reversing the rise in abortion rates, they need to focus on putting people back to work making decent pay. Putting women to work in large part means spending money at the state level to keep them on public payrolls.
But even after women are back at work, we still have to wrestle with a big factor: the high number of women living in poverty who seek abortions. One study found that 69 percent of women having abortions in 2008 made incomes lower than 200 percent of the poverty line, while women in that income category make up only 35 percent of the overall population. In fact, the report says, “while abortion rates generally have declined over the last 20 years…rates have increased among low-income women.” And a lot of women have been falling into that category lately. Recent Census numbers show that women’s poverty rate rose to 14.5 percent in 2010, the highest since 1993. Their “extreme poverty rate” — those whose income is less than half of the federal poverty line — is at 6.3 percent, the highest on record.
The link between addressing poverty and lowering the abortion rate may be uncomfortable for conservatives like Mitt “I don’t care about the very poor” Romney, but it’s one of the most important factors. As the report notes, “low income women often have difficulty affording preventive contraception and sometimes address this problem by reducing frequency or dosage use, thereby increasing the risk of unintended pregnancy in the group most likely to decide they are unable to afford to support an additional dependent.”
And lastly, the point conservatives may enjoy the least: we need to increase spending on social services. As the report puts it, “As funding for social services declines, more women may be expected to determine that economic constraints make abortion the only viable option.” The report is mostly talking about services that provide access to contraception. But there are other services that we’re cutting back on that will impact the decision to have a child. For example, 37 states pulled back on child care support in 2010 due to tight budgets. Yet the average cost of full-time care ranges from $3,600 to $18,200 annually. That’s a huge part of the cost of raising a child, but we’re giving parents less support to pay for it.
Women choose to terminate pregnancies for all sorts of reasons and should be able to access abortion care when they do. Tight budgets aren’t the only reason to choose not to have a child. But economic factors that prevent families from having children should be high on conservatives’ list. If we ease those families’ financial situations, they may not have to turn to terminating a pregnancy. But instead conservatives are fighting access to contraceptives, cutting off funding for services that would make life easier for women living in poverty, and blocking job creation policies.
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9 Comments so far
Show AllGood article, Ms. Covert. (You have a cool name!) And thank you for the apt statistics.
Leave it to conservatives to pull the rug out from under those in need every which way so that they can turn around and taunt them for their "failures," "sinfulness," and any number of other punishing castigations. I don't recall the author who stated that Americans speak of family values a lot, but don't especially like children... as might be inferred from such things as budgeting for a "new generation of nuclear weapons" while cutting back on such important childhood development assets as Head Start. The only society more punishing than the U.S. under the growing shadow of fundamentalist religion is probably that of the Taliban.
Religious fundamentalists are the same regardless of what "God" they worship. The Christian fundamentalist can become as much of a terrorist as the Muslim fundamentalist has been. The only difference between the Taliban in Afghanistan is that they have the power to force everyone to follow their wishes. Give Christian fundamentalists the same level of power and they would behave much the same. For proof consider that the "witches" of the Middle Ages were merely "wise women" who provided reproductive services that the Roman Catholic Church and national governments didn't approve of. Think of a society ruled by the likes of Rick Santorum and you have some idea of what things were like back then.
Can't knock this attempt to persuade conservatives that there are practical ("pragmatic") reasons to stop opposing and denying reproductive rights-- and that to the extent a society promotes enlightened policies for health care, contraceptives, and choice, abortions will become an increasingly rarer last resort.
But it will only appeal to those who are nominally rational and open-minded in the first place.
The reactionary, obtuse "social conservative" who extols "personal responsibility" as a be-all and end-all will be horrified and appalled at the suggestion that "society" should expend funds and resources accommodating the ordinary unprivileged citizen's reproductive vicissitudes-- especially women's.
Instead, in their smug "tough love" way, they hew to a simpler perspective: first of all, everyone (women) has the inalienable right and ability to avoid pregnancy in the first place.
That is, in general-- and especially when times are tough-- economically disadvantaged persons need to accept the hard truth that sexual intercourse is simply a luxury they can't afford.
And if they are determined to indulge their base carnal instincts, they'll just have to suck it up (metaphorically, that is) and live responsibly with the consequences.
Are there no prisons? Or, short of that, orphanages?
That's the high road to which social conservatives insist that decent, civilized society should keep. I fear they will not be at all sympathetic to greasing the road to national ruin and perdition with social services that only encourage the poor's deplorable and unnecessary licentiousness.
Yes, indeed, Ms Covert - it was a brilliant article. And your comments are spot-on, too, SR.
But ObedientServant has the right of it, sadly.
Besides which, the rich person will argue, "the more babies the poor have, the more choice *I* will have in the way of a maid, a pool-boy or a burger-slinger, and the less I will have to pay them (because there are so many of the brats scrabbling for the job). And when we go Marchin' through Damascus, Teheran and Beijing, Hanoi, Pyongyang and Havana, the more bodies we will have to garrison those cities with."
There's some truth to this. The militaries of the 19th Century and earlier were often composed of people who had no where else to turn to. This is also the era where even the middle class had housekeepers who came in every week and cleaned. Many of these were either minorities or recent immigrants who had to take whatever work they could find. Back then there was no job "Americans wouldn't do" because there were so many poor people, including immigrants "just off the boat" looking for any work they could find. This is the sort of society the Republicans see as "ideal".
Blind to Evolution
--------------------------
The white neoliberal evangelical plan for the future,
Is for every women is to be ignorant and poor,
Unemployed, she will get pregnant for sure,
and breed more white people who are evangelically pure.
But the plan will surely work on everyone else too,
including a race and culture mixed population stew.
If only these cultural straint-jacket, God self-appointed elves,
could keep their beliefs quiet and only apply to themselves.
If they were really very smart, and had even the slightest clue,
They would request birth control and abortions for every race and creed,
excepting their own, so only they can fruitfully procreate and breed.
But those that do not believe in evolution, will die as species do.
So what they are afraid of, is that their smarter women will learn,
and control their reproduction, and so a much better lifetime earn.
Which leaves the instinctively unrestrained, to make more of their kind,
Fear not, this is how evolution keeps its breeding stock to it blind.
I have read that in 2011 there were something like 330000 abortions. Lets for argument's sake say these had NOT occurred and those Children were now growing and thriving. Now please don't think me callous but as a practical issue how could we afford to offer them all healthcare, education in a few years and jobs? What would our already dreadful infant mortality numbers look like? What options would be open to these 'unwanted' children.
You are Absolutely correct!
In 2009 alone over $330,000 children were borne to undocumented women.
@ $10,000 a year to school for 12 years and $28,000 from prenatal - postnatal that's $148,000. so a family with 3 children is costing YOU $444,000. How many lifetimes would it take to cover that in taxes at $12 an hour?
Hispanic-origin population would contribute 32 percent of the Nation's population growth from 1990 to 2000, 39 percent from 2000 to 2010, 45 percent from 2010 to 2030, and 60 percent from 2030 to 2050. It is your right in the US to have as many children as you want wether you can pay for them or not. Some CULTURES believe in having lots and lots of children as God will provide (he provides better in the US) Flagrant procreation is a cultural problem.
48% of the population now doesn't pay taxes or gets subsidies from the government. When it tips the other way (more than 50% not paying taxes) - we're going down the tubes.
Don't apologize or think it callous. You speak the truth.