Education would not have had the same effect, because China would not have been able to change its culture quickly enough in the absence of massive government penalties for children after the first. You obviously know nothing about Chinese culture, because aside from the usual pressures to have more kids that come with a subsistence-lifestyle, there is also a very strong cultural incentive to have children. Both Chinese-developed religions, Confucianism and Daoism stress the importance of children in having a rich and fulfilling life. Furthermore, since a son is a Chinese family's retirement policy, any families without sons would try and try until they got a son. And then they would try for a second one as added security, just in case something happened to their first. At least with the one child policy, they stop after the first son.PkbonupePeter_Kcos8 wrote: Whether the one child policy was ultimately necessary or not is debatable. Education and birth control programs ( in addition to reform of China's deplorably inefficient "communal farms") could have conceivably had many of the same effects, without resorting to the Orwellian horrors the Chinese government ultimately ended up imposing on their rural population.
I live in China. I have friends who are peasants. Your 'lol, edumacate them' idea is full of shit, and is no different from the Europeans who went up to the aborigines in the 19th century and assumed that if you show them western stuff like Jesus and steam engines, then they will immediately want to join "enlightened western society" and start acting just like white people. If you are going to offer ideas, examine your cultural biases first and realise that social programs have to be tailored to the local culture or they just won't work. And you grandly busting in and saying "well, clearly it would be better if you'd done it this way" just shows you to be an ethnocentric piece of shit.
And the problem with the 'communal farms' came not when the farms were communalised, but rather when the profits of the farming were communalised. When people could gain rewards based on how hard they worked, rather than based on 1/x of the total profit of the commune, it was fine. The system they have now is decent: peasants are alloted land based on how many people their are in their family, which they can farm as they see fit (if you break the one and a half child policy, children after the second child/first if it's a son don't count as people in your family). Recently they even changed the law so that they can sell their farming rights to someone else in the village, and use the money for other business ventures. I suppose it would be better if they were using more modern farming methods, but illiterate peasants aren't going to do that, and there are moral issues with just kicking them off of the land and replacing them with someone "more efficient".
As an example of how productive a farm can be, let's take my friend's village:
There are about 100 people in the village, give or take.
They're peasants, which means they all ignore the one child policy and have about two children per family on average. Without the one child policy, they would have more, because there would be fewer penalties. Anyway, there are about 25 families.
My friend's currently has four "dependents", as far as the government is concerned - my friend's parents, their younger son and their grandson (son of their older son).
They usually have two crops a year: soy for the summer crop, wheat for the winter crop.
With this, my friend's father earns about 30 kuai a day, on average. That's $4.39. With this, they support my friend's mother, father and grandson. They also help my friend (who is in uni) and her younger brother (who is actually her cousin, but got adopted as her brother, since her uncle is a government worker who faced stricter penalties for disobeying the one child policy than her peasant parents). So five people. On $4.39/day. They supplement this with chickens and pigs and other farm produce. The grandson's parents help support their son.
Assuming my friend's farm is representative of the village, the village feeds about 100 people on $109/day. That's $1.09/person/day. Slightly more than a dollar a day.
Now, let's say that there was no one child policy, so people had more children. Say, every family had one more child (I know these peopld - this is a lowball estimate of how many extra children they'd have, but eh). That would increase the population of the village by about 25 people.
Farmland availability would stay the same. This village is in Anhui province in China. It has been developed for thousands of years. There are no mountains that they could level. No forests to clear, except for the monocultures they recently planted along the riverbanks in order to stop erosion. There is no extra land. So they have no option other than to feed this extra population on the same resources.
With one extra child per family, the village suddenly feeds 125 people on $109/day. That's $0.88/person/day. That's 20% less per person. Are you aware of how big a difference 20% of your resources is when you're already at subsistence level? I bet not.
It doesn't even matter how the extra babies are distributed amongst the families - since the land is communalised, the entire village gets the same reduction in land (and thus earnings) per capita.
This isn't even taking into consideration some of the other problems coming from having a larger population. The village doesn't have plumbing, so a 20% larger population means extra strain on the wells. It means an extra 20% more shit, which isn't getting treated. My friends parents can currently stretch their budget to help support her university study and to send my friend's brother to the better high school in the city. If they earnt 20% less, they would not be able to do that, any my friend and her brother would not be able to get their education. And then my friend, rather than being able to break out of poverty as she is doing, would have no option but to become yet another semi-literate peasant.
Have a think about this, you fucking moron. I bet that if you lost 20c of income a day, all you'd have to worry about is eating one less fucking Mars Bar a week, rather than having to worry about feeding your family and being able to afford to send your kids to high school.
EDIT: Oh yes, and abortions have never been mandatory. That is a lie. Some corrupt officials in Guangzi province were doing it to make their stats look good, and once it came out, the people involved were punished. The One Child Policy involves fining families, denying the "one child" monetary bonus and firing government employees who break the policy. Saying that the one child policy is bad because of forced abortions is like saying that Chinese food standards laws are bad because of the milk scandal - despite the issue being with endemic corruption and NOT the laws as written.