The Impact of Abortion Legalization on Fertility and Maternal Mortality: New Evidence from Mexico
Abstract
We examine the effect of a large-scale, free, elective abortion program implemented in Mexico
City in 2007. Prior to this program, all states and districts in Mexico had very limited, or no, access to elective abortion. A localized reform in Mexico City resulted in a sharp increase in the request and use of early term elective abortions: approximately 90,000 abortions were
administered by public health providers in the four years following the reform, versus only
62 in the five years preceding the reform. We provide evidence using national vital statistics
data from Mexico covering over 23 million births and over 11,000 cases of maternal deaths. Our difference-in-difference estimates suggest that this program resulted in a reduction in births by 2.3 to 3.8% among women aged 15-44 and by 5.1 to 7.1% among teenage women (15-19 year-olds). Similar results are found for maternal mortality, for which we find a sharp fall in the rate of maternal deaths, by 8.8 to 16.2% for women aged 15-44 and by 14.9 to as much as 30.3% among teenagers. All told, the reform appears to increase the average age of women at first birth, and reduce the number of mothers giving birth at higher parities.
Other description
JEL: J13, I15, I18, O15
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2016-06Author
Clarke, Damian
Mühlrad, Hanna
Keywords
Fertility
Maternal Mortality
Abortion legalization
Mexico
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
661
Language
eng