The end of Roe v. Wade has created a steady stream of horror stories in conservative states: preteen rape survivors who have to flee across state lines; women with wanted but totally unviable pregnancies who have to do the same; people whose pregnancies threaten to kill them but can’t get care until they are on the brink of death. The list goes on and on.
If we examine surveys of Americans who do have abortions, about three-quarters of them cite an inability to afford another child as among their reasons.
It’s understandable that such nightmarish stories get a lot of media attention. But it also raises a question: What is happening to the number of abortions overall? And how much have things really changed since the Dobbs decision in June? The surprising answer appears to be “not much.”
Matt Bruenig, head of the People’s Policy Project think tank, compiled data gathered by the Society of Family Planning, which surveyed most abortion providers from April to August this year, thus allowing a measurement of what happened when Dobbs took effect.
It found that while abortions have dropped by 12,500 per month in states with new restrictions (or old ones that came into force), they have increased by 7,140 per month in states without them. In total, monthly abortions dropped from about 85,000 to about 79,600.
In other words, the anti-abortion movement got its major objective, what it had been frenziedly working toward for decades, and the result is a reduction in abortions of about … 6%.
The actual number is, in fact, less than that, because the Society of Family Planning figure doesn’t include nonprescription use of abortion pills, which can be obtained relatively easily from other states or Mexico (where pharmacies have seen a surge of American buyers). That type of abortion will surely grow as knowledge of how to get around the restrictions spreads.
This suggests that even if the anti-abortion movement gets a national ban enforced — a tall order given how similar measures have recently failed in deep-red Kansas, Kentucky and Montana — the effect on abortion numbers would likely be only temporary. If the anti-abortion movement actually cared to reduce abortions, it would be both more just and more effective to address the large and growing financial burdens of parenthood.
Now, one might quibble with Bruenig’s read of the data. It’s possible that the number of abortions would have gone up without the Dobbs decision, in which case the effect is understated.
The number had increased slightly from 2017 to 2020, though before that it had declined consistently for decades. And it should also be emphasized that even if the total number of abortions did not move very much, as noted above, it still created tremendous suffering where the newer restrictions did bite.
While abortion patients are disproportionately low-income, more than half are above the poverty line.
But even granting those caveats, it is all but undeniable that overturning Roe had only a small impact on total abortion numbers. The Society of Family Planning produces high-quality data, and its survey (by design) doesn’t even measure some kinds of abortions. And this result makes some sense — after all, many states with new restrictions had already made it very difficult to get a legal abortion with onerous regulations and legal harassment.
On the other hand, while abortion seekers are disproportionately low-income, more than half are above the poverty line. It’s often difficult for them to arrange transportation across state lines or acquire abortion pills, but it’s seldom impossible.
To be sure, a national abortion ban likely would seriously disrupt abortion access. And sure enough, anti-abortion activists are attempting to get a hack Trump-appointed judge to declare abortion pills unconstitutional. But even this would likely have only a temporary effect.
Perhaps the most convincing evidence on this question comes from an example from history. In 1966, Romania’s megalomaniac communist dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu banned all abortion and contraception in an attempt to increase the size of the population and labor force.
In the years immediately following, the birth rate did indeed shoot up. But soon, women figured out that they could bribe doctors to get abortions or contraception, or go to other countries to get them, or attempt grim amateur procedures.









