The Economic Impact of Access to Reproductive Health Services
Paper Session
Saturday, Jan. 7, 2023 2:30 PM - 4:30 PM (CST)
- Chair: Martha Bailey, University of California-Los Angeles
Effects of Restrictive Abortion Legislation on Cohort Mortality: Evidence from 19th Century Law Variation
Abstract
TBDTrap'd Teens: Impacts of Abortion Provider Regulations on Fertility & Education
Abstract
Targeted regulations of abortion providers (TRAP laws) are the fastest growing abortion restriction in the U.S. These often result in clinic closures, limiting abortion access. We study how women's exposure to these laws in adolescence affects their fertility and educational attainment. For this study, we codify the legal history of all TRAP laws ever implemented. We explore the impacts of TRAP laws on teen births using an event-study analysis and stacked differences-in-differences methodology to avoid issues of negative weighting inherent in two-way fixed effects approaches. Consistent with other evidence on abortion access, we find that impacts on births are large and robust for Black women. Black teen births in states that implemented TRAP laws increased by 3 percent relative to changes in states without these restrictions. We offer evidence that these impacts are driven by reductions in abortion access, abortion use, and contraception use among Black teens. We further document that adolescent exposure to TRAP laws has downstream impacts on education. We find that Black women first exposed to TRAP laws before age 18 are 1 to 3 percentage points less likely to initiate and complete college. This study documents the important role that abortion access plays in reducing the harmful economic impacts of unintended teen motherhood. The findings suggest that modern abortion restrictions are harming women's efforts at economic advancement and are perpetuating racial inequality.How Subsidies Affect Contraceptive Use, Pregnancies, and Abortion among Low-Income Women in the U.S.: A Randomized Control Trial
Abstract
This paper uses a randomized control trial to examine how subsidies affect the use of contraceptives among low-income women seeking reproductive health care in the U.S. Study participants are randomized to receive vouchers which cover the costs of any contraceptive up to a maximum value of 50% or 100% of a name-brand intrauterine device. We find that women’s choice of contraception is highly sensitive to price, with the elasticity of LARC take-up ranging from -2.3 to -3.4. The findings imply that a U.S. policy eliminating out-of-pocket costs for Title X women would reduce pregnancies by 5.4%, birth rates by 3.5%, and abortions by 8.1%.JEL Classifications
- I1 - Health