WSJ Argues More Kids Will Drive Domestic Consumption

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by Lon Newman, Family Planning Health Services

February 10, 2009 - 8:00am (Print)

On January 27th, the Wall Street Journal Editorial Board (WSJ) published an opinion piece titled, "Speaker Nancy Malthus."

It isn't Speaker Pelosi whose thinking is seriously out-of-date. Inclusion of Medicaid family planning access in the economic stimulus package does not imply a belief that "more people mean less economic growth," as the WSJ assumes. Equally unsubstantiated and even internally contradictory, is the editorial board's rather medieval argument that we must produce more children to support us in our retirement. (Although, after last year's stock market crash, maybe children are the only pension plan we have left.) Although the editorial suggests that contraceptives as a part of an economic stimulus plan are "loopy," the editorial's assertion that we need to have more children to maintain domestic consumption is clearly the all-out loopiest - tracing its roots, perhaps, to the "go shopping" response to terrorist attacks. "Larger families have more credit cards, so have a larger family."

Access to contraceptive care enables women to meet their educational goals, to participate fully in society, to time pregnancies for health as well as to achieve career aspirations.  Family planning is voluntarily prevention of unintended pregnancies -- meaning women and their families are able to determine for themselves whether and when to have children. The human capital connection is that the cost of unintended pregnancy is also borne by employers in the form of higher insurance premiums, more family medical leaves, substitution expenses, rehiring/recruitment costs, retraining costs, and lost productivity.  

This piece also appeared on Belowthewaist.org.

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MomTFH Speaker Nancy Malthus? February 10, 2009 - 3:09pm

OK, correct me if I am wrong, but doesn't Speaker Nancy Pelosi have five children of her own? This is getting so ridiculous. Allowing women who want birth control to have access to affordable birth control is not the same thing as population control.

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colleen Ah, The WSJ always makes February 10, 2009 - 6:00pm

Ah, The WSJ always makes me feel sympathetic towards the French Revolution. 

The WSJ editorial board once (in the 90's) described working single mothers as "lucky duckies" because they pay no taxes. A statement which was and is not only factually inaccurate, it's also as shallow and low as is much of the sociopathic tripe they publish. 

If you skipped the editorial pages  the WSJ used to be a good read but since Murdoch acquired it their standards have eroded considerably and conspicuously. 

For reasons that should not be a mystery to anyone but probably are to Juan Williams and Rupert Murdoch, News Corp lost several billion last quarter. Let's hope this trend continues