By Cardinal George Pell 
FAR from bringing equality,  contraception has redistributed power away from women, says George Pell. 
               
The Australian - THIS year is the 50th anniversary of the contraceptive pill, a  development that has changed Western life enormously, in some ways most  people do not understand.
While majority opinion regards the pill  as a significant social benefit for giving women greater control of  their fertility, the consensus is not overwhelming, especially among  women.
A May CBS News poll of 591 adult Americans found that 59  per cent of men and 54 per cent of women believed the pill had made  women's lives better.
In an article in the ecumenical journal  First Things that month, North American economist Timothy Reichert  approached the topic with "straight-forward microeconomic reasoning",  concluding that contraception had triggered a redistribution of wealth  and power from women and children to men.
Applying the insights of the market, he points out that relative  scarcity or abundance affects behaviour in important ways and that  significant technological changes, such as the pill, have broad social  effects. His basic thesis is that the pill has divided what was once a  single mating market into two markets.
This first is a market for  sexual relationships, which most young men and women frequent early in  their adult life. The second is a market for marital or partnership  relationships, where most participate later on.
Because the pill  means that participation in the sex market need not result in pregnancy,  the costs of having premarital and extra-marital sex have been lowered.
The  old single mating market was populated by roughly the same number of  men and women, but this is no longer the case in the two new markets.
Because  most women want to have children, they enter the marriage market  earlier than men, often by their early 30s. Men are under no such  constraints.
Evolutionary biology dictates that there will always  be more men than women in the sex market. Their natural roles are  different. Women take nine months to make a baby, while it takes a man  10 minutes. St Augustine claimed that the sacrament of marriage was  developed to constrain men to take an interest in their children.
Men  leave the sex market at a higher average age than women to enter the  marriage market.
This means that women have a higher bargaining  power in the sex market while they remain there (because of the larger  number of men there) but face much stiffer competition for marriageable  men (because of the lower supply) than earlier generations.
In  other words, men take more of "the gains from trade" that marriage  produces today.
Reichert also claims that this market division  produces several self-reinforcing consequences, including more  infidelity.
From a Christian viewpoint it is incongruous and  inappropriate to consider baby-free infidelity as an advantage for women  or men.
But younger women are likelier to link up with older,  successful men than older women with young men, as any number of married  women can attest after rearing children, only to find their husband has  left for a younger woman.
Another consequence is a greater  likelihood of divorce. Because of their lower bargaining power, more  women strike "bad deals" in marriage and later feel compelled to escape.  This is easier today because the social stigma of divorce has declined  and because of no-fault divorce laws.
More women also can afford  to divorce and, in some cases, prenuptial agreements provide insurance  against the worst.
Only the official teaching of the Catholic  Church remains opposed to the pill and indeed all artificial  contraception, but this is not even a majority position among Catholic  churchgoers of child-bearing age.
Indeed, this particular Catholic  teaching is often cited as diminishing the church's authority to teach  on morality among Catholics themselves, as well as provoking disbelief  and even astonishment among other Christians and non-believers.
Catholic  teaching does not require women to do nothing but have children but it  does ask couples to be open to kids and to be generous.
What this  means in any particular situation is for each couple to decide.
Progressive  Catholic opinion 40 or 50 years ago urged believers to follow their  consciences and reject the church's opposition to artificial  contraception. Today's advocates of the primacy of personal conscience  urge Catholics to pick and choose among the church's teachings on  marriage, sexuality and life issues, although they generally allow fewer  liberties in social justice or ecology.
These changes, regarded  as progressive or misguided depending on one's viewpoint, are not  coincidental but follow from the revolutionary consequences of the pill  on moral thinking and social behaviour; on the broadening endorsement of  a moral individualism that ignores or rejects as inevitable the damage  inflicted on the social fabric. This revolution was reinforced by the  music of the 1960s, for example Mick Jagger's Rolling Stones, or the  Beatles.
While early Catholic supporters of the pill claimed it  would diminish the number of abortions, this has not eventuated.  Whatever the causes, abortion rates have increased dramatically since  the mid-60s in Australia and the US, although the number has peaked.
Real-life  experience suggests that the "contraceptive mentality" pope Paul VI  warned about in 1968 has had unforeseen consequences. To paraphrase  Reichert, an unwanted baby threatens prosperity and lifestyle, making  abortion seem necessary.
It is the women who bear most of the  burden of trauma and grief from abortions.
Even women who believe  deeply in the Christian notion of godly forgiveness, and those who do  not believe in God at all, can battle for years with unassuaged guilt.
In  support of his claims that women are bearing a disproportionate burden  in the new paradigm, Reichert cites evidence that in the past 35 years  across the industrialised world women's happiness has declined  absolutely and relative to men.
We have a new gender gap where men  report a higher subjective wellbeing. This decline in women's happiness  coincides broadly with the arrival of the sexual revolution, triggered  by the invention of the pill.
The ancient Christian consensus,  which lasted for 1900 years, linking sexual activity to the lovemaking  of a husband and wife to create new life, was first broken by the  Anglican Church's Lambeth Conference approval of contraception in 1930.
In  this new contraceptive era, where no Western country produces enough  children to maintain population levels, the Catholic stance is isolated,  rejected and often despised.
But the use of the contraceptive  pill not only changes the dynamics within a family between husband and  wife, it is also changing our broader society in ways we understand  imperfectly.
But 50 years is not a long time; it is still early in  the story.
Cardinal George Pell is the Catholic Archbishop of  Sydney.
 
 
 
1 comment:
And we may behold a cruel irony in the theatre of modern life. The victims of this market - often women who are used sexually as young girls and who later are confounded at not being able to find 'a good man', to 'settle down with', are the very women who will laud the Pill and other contraception as being 'the God send'. They view it as the thing that will 'save' them, when in fact, it is the very thing that leads to their ruin.
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