In a Recession, Abortions Are Not a Bad Choice

April 1, 2009 RSS Feed Print

By Bonnie Erbe, Thomas Jefferson Street blog.

The recession is driving American demand for contraception. And for abortions. The media have been rife this past week with stories about the rising number of couples and single mothers doing the math and deciding this is no time to bring a child into the world—not when the economy is depressed, jobs are scarce, and family incomes are dropping.

The media have also been rife with stories portraying this trend as something of a tragedy. Let me propose a counter view: It is not.

The Associated Press ran a story on March 25 that read as follows:

The pregnant woman showed up at the medical centre in flip-flops and in tears, after walking there to save bus fare.

Her boyfriend had lost his job, she told her doctor in Oakland, Calif., and now—fearing harder times for her family—she wanted to abort what would have been her fourth child.

"This was a desired pregnancy—she'd been getting prenatal care—but they re-evaluated expenses and decided not to continue," said Dr. Pratima Gupta. "When I was doing the options counseling, she interrupted me halfway through, crying, and said, 'Dr. Gupta, I just walked here for an hour. I'm sure of my decision.'"

Yes, it's sad that this unwed, pregnant mother of three had no money for bus fare. It's terrible that her boyfriend lost his job. It is heart-wrenching that she fell to tears in the doctor's office. But in the long run, can we not agree that an unwed couple's decision not to bring a fourth child into the world when they are having trouble feeding themselves and three children is no tragedy? It's actually a fact-based, rational decision that in the end benefits the three children they already have and society as well.

Feeding and raising children is expensive. Tuition may be free at public schools but there are still books, transportation, food, clothes, medical care and activities that add up—way up. One may assume this family of five is struggling just to maintain its basics: housing and food. Add one more child and those costs rise as income drops. It's no tragedy: it's a good decision. The decision benefits society in two ways. It allows the couple to focus more time, energy and resources on their three children, giving each child a better life and a better chance of growing up to contribute to society. It also lessens the chance the family will have to rely on scarce public resources (food stamps, TANF) to raise their children.

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Tags:
abortion,
economy,
recession

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So many anti-abortions nuts that are flaming the author and are hypocrites to boot.

If any of these people don't want an abortion, then don't have one, and please have a responsible sex life. Practice what you preach.

So many tout adoption as the cure-all yet how many of these actually adopt? What about all the kids that are minorities or special needs kids (like children born addicted i.e); these don't kids don't get adopted as much as "the cute white healthy babies" and languish in foster care until 18 when the government turns them out. How about making it easier for those who want to adopt such kids but can't because the adopters MUST be part of a heterosexual couple? Hmmm, how anti-abortionists support gay adoption or single adoption? I bet not a lot.

These anti-abortionists need to put there money where their mouth is. Do they support HIGHER PERMANENT taxes and MORE government social involved programs to actually help these women and girls to be able to keep their children? Again, I bet not a lot. Do their churches care anything about these women ONCE the child is born? Or do they refer that female back to the "government assistance?" The churches have enough money for political contributions and not enough to help a woman out for a few years after the child is born so she can get on her feet and support that kid without fear of poverty? I bet not a lot churches actually care enough to really do that, but they could if they really wanted to.

How about going after the men that father these kids? Ostracizing those who refuse to have a responsible sex life? How many are willing to do that for real? Again, not a lot.

A consistent commitment to helping these women out might actually DECREASE abortions and supporting birth control ( too many anti-abortionists don't support birth control pill usage, sterilizations, etc.) What we have today isn't enough because it isn't infallible and better, honest promotion of responsible birth control use could actually decrease abortions.

Realist101 of CA 11:36AM January 22, 2012

The author is right. Having children that you can't support is unconscionable. Fruitcakes who somehow want to tie this in to Obama notwithstanding...

Peeved, who states he can't see how not having kids you can't support helps society, clearly didn't read the rest of the article.

And Phyllis Hammonds of NC needs to work on her reading comprehension skills.

--Samiam--

Sam888 of CA 9:27PM April 01, 2011

Its quite ironic that the Obama campaign and supporters kept proclaiming this message of "hope." This article - and I'm sure the author is an Obama supporter - is the epitome of despair and nihilism. Contraception and abortion are basically society committing a slow and protracted suicide.

Where there is new life, there is hope. And taking innocent life is a sign of despair.

I, for one, will decline Obama's and this woman's false "hope" for people and our society.

pearls of IL 2:49PM November 18, 2010

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report and hosts PBS's weekly news analysis program, To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbe. She also writes a weekly syndicated newspaper column for Scripps Howard News Service.

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