Written By Lexx Thornton
In the three years since the overturn of Roe v. Wade, the human and economic toll of abortion restrictions remains staggering, impacting all women. The latest estimates show that the 16 states with the most restrictive abortion policies1 are responsible for over $64 billion in annual economic losses.
That amount could fund the average health care costs associated with pregnancy, childbirth, and postpartum care for nearly all the 3.6 million births in the United States in 2024.
And $64 billion only reflects the impact of the most severe restrictions, like total or near-total bans on abortion. Many other states do not ban abortion outright but still impose significant barriers that reduce access, such as waiting periods, mandated counseling, gestational limits, or restrictions on providers. When accounting for all state-level restrictions on abortion access, combined with the absence of federal protections, the annual economic cost climbs to more than$133 billion nationally.
Abortion restrictions weaken the entire economy and result in fewer women participating in the workforce—not because they don’t want to, but because policy decisions are standing in their way. Labor force participation among women ages 15 to 44 would be significantly higher ifthese restrictions weren’t in place. Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and West Virginia—states with some of the most restrictive abortion policies—would see the largest increases among all states. In Alabama, Louisiana, and West Virginia, women’s labor force participation would be2.2 percent higher; in Mississippi, it would be 2.3 percent higher.
Nationwide, without policy road blocks to accessing reproductive health care, we’d see over half a million more women—556,042—in the labor force every year. That kind of shift wouldn’t just help women and families, it would also improve the economy. National gross domestic product(GDP) would rise by 0.5 percent, enough to more than offset the US economy’s 0.3 percent contraction in the first quarter of this year.
And the impact wouldn’t stop there. States like Arkansas, South Carolina, and West Virginia—which rank low in both reproductive rights—would see their state GDPs grow by 0.8 percent or more, among the highest economic gains nationally.
While abortion restrictions harm women and the economy more broadly, they do not affect all communities equally. Women of color—especially Black and Latina women—are more likely to experience the consequences of restrictive policies and face additional economic and structural barriers to accessing care, compounding the economic harm. Analysis reveals that barriers to abortion access result in:
- A higher percentage of labor force losses among Black and Latina women ages 15 to 44(1.4 percent for each) than among White women in this age group (1.1 percent).
- A larger percentage of earnings growth losses among Black women ages 15 to 44 (9.6percent) than among White women in this age group (8.7 percent). That’s money thatcould have gone toward paying for rent, child care, education, retirement savings, andother investments in families and communities.
- Abortion restrictions are not only harmful and unpopular, but they are also economicallyshort-sighted.They reduce workforce participation, lower earnings, and limit careergrowth for women. At the same time, employers in ban states are facing growingchallenges in attracting and retaining talent: Residents—especially younger people andthose with more education or who are planning.
- To have children soon—are moving elsewhere, and local economies are falling behind.Protecting abortion access is essential not only for reproductive autonomy but also foradvancing economic opportunity for women and their families nationwide.
