I never said it was entirely pastoral.
Slovakia is a mountainous country which has remained almost entirely pastoral.
I made neither such claim. I merely mentioned the former possibility as one of an almost unlimited number of factors which may cause variance in birth rates.
Which is precisely why my reasoning is based on comparing Poland against neighboring Central European countries, which are similar economically, socially, culturally and religiously (
ceteris paribus). Main social and economic trends are the same accross the region and have been for the last 20 years if not more. The factor responsible for the discrepancy would has to be specific to Poland, i.e. not cause differences between other countries I used in the comparison (Czech Rep., Slovakia, Hungary). There is precisely
one such factor, and it is the abortion law, which impacts how statistics is gathered.
What you are doing, is that you are asserting that discrepancy is due to some unaccounted for factor, but you are unable to name this factor. Sorry, the onus is on you to (1) name that factor, (2) present values of that factor for each country under comparison and (3) show how that factor impacts fertility rates. I’ve done my homework, so I’m waiting till you do yours. Numbers, please.
So if a crime becomes a widespread spocial problem, we should legallise it? And that will impriove matters how?
Regarding abortion, I like
the German approach with mandatory counselling. Also, you may want to know that German Catholic Church provided such counseling and Church-affiliated advisors had the best results in turning the women away from abortion. In 1999 Vatican banned this

.
In case abortion is illegal there is no counselling, because abortion providers are in it for the money (and there is a suitable risk premium…).
For a more general example while criminalization is not always the best answer, see this:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_policy_of_Portugal
Begging the question. You have been called upon to demonstrate this claim and have failed to do so. Simply re-stating the claim in other words is not evidence.
Fact one: a single abortion provider busted last year clandestinly performed
at least 14% of officially reported abortions. That means that the official abortion statistics is unreliable. Or, more specifically, there is a vast abortion underground that does not enter official numbers.
Fact two: fertility rate is the same as similar neighboring countries, where abortion is legal and 10-30% of pregnancies are aborted. No other convincing explanation for the discrepancy. (Actually, I am being generous here. If you look at the data, the fact that Poland has both lower contraceptive use and lower fertility rate than Slovakia is a strong indicator that Poland has more abortions that Slovakia, if we assume that countries under comparison are similar enough.)
Fact three: official 2008 data: 1611 rapes, 1 (one) legal abortion under rape exception.
From US data, a raped woman has ca. 5% chance for getting pregnant, and 50% of these choose to abort. Which means that Poland should be recording around 40 rape-related abortions per year. Even if we were to assume that Polish women are so pro-life that only a quarter of pregnant rape victims would request an abortion (instead of half), we still should have 20 reported abortions under this exception. Not happening.
Fact four: Thinly veiled ads for abortion services in newspapers.
I also wonder if you’ve thought about the implications of your claim.
Yes. Between 50 thousand (my estimate) and 200 thousand (estimate from Polish pro-choice groups) Polish children are killed each year, while both the government and the Church wave the official data and claim that the problem does not exist.
How’s that?