o Planned Parenthood claims that abortion “constitutes 3%” of the company’s services. While technically true, an unorthodox calculation underlies that statistic. Planned Parenthood’s 3% calculation equally weights all products and services; for example, the calculation counts a condom, a pregnancy test and a $468 abortion the same. This is misleading and, as in any financial exercise, the correct assessment is a dollar-weighted one.While some of the report’s assertions seem more debatable than others, that last tidbit about repeat customers is particularly worth noting because it gets to Riler’s most important point: namely, that Planned Parenthood is a corporation, and one with a highly-refined business model at that. Though the organization likes to portray itself as the last refuge of single mothers and enlightener of the naive, it could not exist without a large amount of cynical acumen. Far from being a neutral observer or a Good Samaritan bystander, it has growth goals, well-tested methods, and a target audience.
o At an average of $468 a head, Planned Parenthood collected $155 million in abortion revenues in 2009, or 38.4% of its health centre income.
o In the face of nationally falling abortions, down to 92% in 2009 versus 2000 levels, Planned Parenthood succeeded in growing its abortions by 68%.
o Planned Parenthood’s 2009-2010 Annual Report describes 329,445 abortions as compared to 841 adoption referrals. (!)
o Planned Parenthood’s average customer repeated business four times in 2010. That customer bought contraception, disease testing, pregnancy tests and abortions. Four times a year is a repeat rate more characteristic of a high-end retail business than an annual well-woman exam.
Perhaps, though, a corporate analogy is overly generous, for it says nothing about the morality of the firm’s goals. To that end, near the conclusion of the article, Riler makes a more accurate, unsettling analogy: “Planned Parenthood’s effective business model was pioneered by drug pushers–give away freebies in anticipation of bigger-ticket sales when the customer is desperate.”
found at First Things
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