Why Reducing Poverty Will Reduce Abortion

Social programs to help the poor would have a big impact.

Sarah Terzo
6 min readNov 10, 2021
Photo By zahar2000 at Canva

A woman’s financial situation has a big impact on whether she has or considers an abortion.

Poverty and Abortion Statistics in the United States

One of the most common reasons women give for having abortions is they can’t afford to care for their baby.

In a 2004 study by the Alan Guttmacher Institute, of U.S. women who had abortions, 73% gave this as one of the reasons.

There’s evidence the situation may be even worse today. Women getting abortions are more likely to be poor than those who had the procedure roughly 30 years ago.

While only 16% of women of childbearing age in the general population live below the poverty line, in 2014, 49% of women getting abortions did. In 2008, the percentage was 42%. In 1994, it was about 25%.

The percentage of women having abortions who are poor is steadily increasing: 2.3% per year between 2008 and 2014.

Additionally, of women having abortions, 26% had incomes of 100% to 199% of the poverty line. Yet these women are only 18% of the population.(1)

--

--

Sarah Terzo
Sarah Terzo

Written by Sarah Terzo

Sarah Terzo is a journalist who supports the Consistent Life Ethic, which opposes all violence & seeks to protect human life from conception to natural death.

No responses yet