On the surface a one child policy is a great idea. As long as people would accept that Mom Nature is throwing a female their way over a male.
With a population of 1,338,299,500 (1 and a third
Billion) China needs to do something about its growing population.
I'm certain that when they made this policy none of them dreamed of parents selectively aborting fetuses due to gender to get a boy. Now that it is going on what solutions can they readily use to insure a better mix of genders?
The alternative to a strict, one child policy for all is to play favorites, denying children to some, or many and allowing some or a few to procreate. On what grounds are such choices made? Political? Financial? Do we dare pop the lid on eugenics and deny people with potential hereditary ailments from having children? If so, how many ailments do we include on the no procreation policy?
List of genetically linked disorders:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_genetic_disorders
Google 'peak everything'... While we are talking loudly about peak oil and how its loss will directly impact human civilization, we are actually seeing a peak to everything including clean drinking water as it takes time and energy to clean up water.
8 years from now humanity will hit the 8 billion mark, 17 years from now 9 billion, 26 years from now 10 billion. We are adding a billion about every 9 years now.
We are facing a crises of such magnitude and importance for the whole globe, not jut China, not just India - all of us.
We either figure out ways to 'fairly' limit our procreation for all, or we will reach a point where there will be a mandatory, carrying a death sentence for breaching it, Edict on no children being procreated without the states approval.
And not just in China. The USA is reaching the point where its hitting a wall on how many people it can feed. The USA produces 60% of the world's food. Half of that is produced in California. California alone has hit the wall in agriculture. While we have all of those fancy canals built in the 30's and 40's which turned the near desert central valley into a virtual garden of Eden, that is turning around and biting us on the butt as hundreds, even thousands of acres each year are being lost to salts.
The Corn belt, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Kansas is reaching the end of its water supply. Right now they are excessively pumping the fossil water that was deposited over 10 thousand years ago by the glaciers. There is not enough precipitation to replace that water, once the ground water goes dry, it won't be until the next glaciation period that it refills.
The USA is not the only place hitting the end of its food production abilities, Europe is extensively damaged.
The oceans are depleted.
Study: Only 10 percent of big ocean fish remain
May 14, 2003
[SIZE="2"]A new global study concludes that 90 percent of all large fishes have disappeared from the world's oceans in the past half century, the devastating result of industrial fishing.
The study, which took 10 years to complete and was published in the international journal Nature this week, paints a grim picture of the Earth's current populations of such species as sharks, swordfish, tuna and marlin.
The authors used data going back 47 years from nine oceanic and four continental shelf systems, ranging from the tropics to the Antarctic. Whether off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada, or in the Gulf of Thailand, the findings were dire, according to the authors.[/SIZE]
Source:
http://articles.cnn.com/2003-05-14/tech/..._s=PM:TECH
This was in 2003, 9 years ago, might as well assume that we are down another percent since China, Japan, the US and many others haven't slowed down their practices of mass fishing.
So. Food alone is going to be a major problem in the decades to come. Right now round-up Ready GM crops are being hit by several 'new' more powerful species of pest and disease. That Genetic modification we used has a few side effects which as lead to super-corn worms and a new form of 'rust' that not only attacks crops but even hardy weeds. And its not just the GM corn that is affected, the older versions of corn don't stand a chance.
When we hit 10 billion, with billions - the majority hungry, we will look back on China's One Child policy as being heroic and a good example of what we all should have done.