
"Pill" by Beppie K on flickr
Cross-posted from In These Times.
Washington’s Old Boys’ club still has its knickers in a wad over the deficit “compromise,” but women across the country can breathe a slight sigh of relief this week. The White House just issued health reform guidelines that will mandate insurance plans to provide birth control to women at no extra cost. The measure is long overdue, part of an array of preventive services recommended by the Institute of Medicine for improving women’s health. But the promise of broader contraceptive access coincides fittingly with the debate over the nation’s budget woes, because birth control is an economic issue.
Consider how essential birth control is for working women. When women can control whether and how many children they bear, they can delay pregnancy until they feel they’re ready, and in the meantime focus on career goals, finishing school, paying off that mortgage or signing divorce papers. The “choice” in reproductive choice refers not only to her ovaries—despite the right-wing scaremongering about unfettered female sexuality—it’s about every choice in life affected by pregnancy and sex.
At the height of the economic crisis, the costs of family planning grew more severe, as did the consequences of having to forgo it. According to a 2009 study by the Guttmacher Institute:
Overall, 29% of surveyed women agree with the statement, “With the economy the way it is, I am more careful than I used to be about using contraception every time I have sex.” Those who are financially worse off are more likely than others to agree with this statement (39% vs. 19%).
The same economic dilemma ironically creates barriers to contraceptive care. Eight percent reported sometimes skipping birth control “in order to save money,” and this was “more common among those who are financially worse off.”
While access to birth control helps poor women weather hardship (and being poor conversely limits reproductive freedom), it’s also historically aided the long-term advancement of women in the workforce. A retrospective look at the impact of the pill shows a parallel with women’s social and economic rise since the 1960s.
A recent study by Martha J. Bailey in the Quarterly Journal of Economics mapped out women’s workforce participation since the widespread introduction of the pill and concluded that
Legal access to the pill before age 21 significantly reduced the likelihood of a first birth before age 22, increased the number of women in the paid labor force, and raised the number of annual hours worked.
Certainly, changing social norms with respect to marriage, fertility and women’s rights were also major factors in boosting women’s economic power, but Bailey concludes, “within the social, legal, and economic context of the 1960s and 1970s that the pill provided a powerful tool for women wishing to capitalize on the emerging labor market opportunities.” If the pill wasn’t exactly an economic cure-all, it helped countless women pursue opportunities that were previously out of reach.
Eventually birth control became a legal touchstone in the struggle for gender equality, according to the National Women’s Law Center. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission finally ruled in 2000 that “an employer’s failure to provide insurance coverage for prescription contraceptives, when it covers other prescription drugs, devices, and preventive care, constitutes unlawful sex discrimination” under the Civil Rights act.
The healthcare system had some catching up to do, too: Years before the EEOC ruling, insurance companies started widely covering Viagra (hardly preventive care for men unless you count preventing embarrassment). But by 2002, insurance coverage of a broad range of contraceptives had more than tripled since 1994, thanks in part to state regulations on contraceptive access.
But today, with the economy still slumped and poor women still priced out of quality health coverage, birth control access remains entwined with economic destiny. Not that you’d hear much about this from GOP deficit hawks who rail against wasteful spending but ignore the value of comprehensive reproductive healthcare. The culture wars mask the fiscal and social burden of contraceptive inequity—either in potential costly abortions or the even costlier consequences of carrying an unwanted pregnancy to term.
Laura Hessberg of the National Partnership for Women and Families testified last November at an Institute of Medicine meeting:
A child who is born as a result of an unintended pregnancy is at greater risk for having a low birth weight, dying in its first year, being abused, and not receiving sufficient resources for healthy development.
Coupled with the other measures recommended by the IOM, such as counseling on domestic violence, programs to promote breastfeeding, and screening for sexually transmitted diseases and diabetes, contraception is just a common sense way to keep women healthy. Limited access to contraception not only contributes to soaring healthcare costs but ensures that the poorest, most vulnerable women will bear the brunt of the burden.
Amanda Marcotte lamented the right’s testosterone blinders:
Conservative opposition to this new regulation may have been predictable—right-wing media outlets rarely miss a chance to rail about the evils of women having sexual intercourse too early—but it still makes no sense.
Republican-driven political discourse of late has been about nothing but the importance of cutting spending and saving money, and so the GOP should be delighted with this simple and clear-cut promise of long-term savings by making contraception free.
Actually, birth control wouldn’t be totally free under the new guidelines, but rather, paid for through overall insurance costs (not co-pays). We’re still stuck with the inherent inequities in the private insurance system (plus there’s that icky religious exemption for anti-birth-control institutions). But widely available birth control does save money through improved health outcomes for women and by extension children and families. Everyone benefits when mom can go to work in the morning and pay for daycare, and can afford to send junior to basketball camp and the dentist.
That little pill isn’t just a money saver for an individual household or mom’s insurance company; it’s an investment in women’s potential as workers, and in the next generation of economic citizens. Every healthy decision made on their behalf is priceless.



15 Comments

It’s about time!
Those knickers in DC have thought it was just fine to have Viagra paid for years. Stupid jerks!
Thanks so much for this Michelle.
I got in a back-and-forth with Tim Carney over this, who wrote that since Plan B is an abortifacient that it violated the rights of Catholics in forcing them to provide etc. But the catholic church does not take the position that plan B is an abortifacient, and allows it to be dispensed in Connecticut catholic hospitals because they find no evidence that it is.
And I’m so glad that now that the economy is headed for the toilet, the Obama administration has the foresight to make birth control Job One.
The last thing that any family or individual needs is an unplanned pregnancy in the midst of financial, medical or personal crisis.
This has been a long time coming. There will probably be pitched legal battles against it in 3-2-1…
I recently retired from a prominent Catholic university. It was my understanding that the health benefits we received did not include contraceptives (I had no need of them, so never inquired). Will this new mandate be enforced for Catholic organizations’ insurance plans too?
There’s a religious exemption available specifically to address that issue. there are more catholic hospitals than I realized.
Plus, it’s based on science!
there’s zero doubt that pregnancy and children affect everything in a woman’s life. But to me, they have even more impact in the lives of unemployed women. Most working women are going to keep working even if they do get pregnant, they’ll work after childbirth as well. But unplanned pregnancies affect the lives of women who do not work and subsequently have fewer financial resources to a much greater degree.
I would anticipate a pretty steep decline in the white birth rate in response to rising unemployment and falling income. It ought to start showing up in the statistics soon, if it hasn’t already. This is a well-established historical pattern.
If birth control is an economic issue, then how about having unprotected sex? How often does a woman in financial straits skip having sex in order to save some money that month?
Or maybe it’s more important to keep doing whatever you like and expect other people to subsidize the cost of your actions and choices.
I think this is a fine idea, but BCP’s don’t protect against STD’s.
While I agree with you that there are people who will continue to engage in unprotected sex if you dropped free birth control off at their front door, most people won’t do that.
You need to think of it more as a public service thing. How many dirt poor people across this country are going at it whether they can afford the consequences or not.
They haven’t invented a responsibility control pill yet, so the birth control pill is going to have to do for now.
the point was though that you staill have to actually TAKE the pill. And some people simply won’t. people who are not responsible do not suddenly become responsible because you provide them free pills.
“The White House just issued health reform guidelines that will mandate insurance plans to provide birth control to women at no extra cost.”
Outstanding. And thanks, Chen, for a well-written post!
“Freedom is something that dies unless it’s used” –Hunter Thompson