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Japan’s child population at record low after falling for 38th consecutive year

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Japan’s child population at record low after falling for 38th consecutive year
Lack of support for working women and long office hours blamed for low birth rates

japanese-birth-rate.jpg

The number of children younger than 15 in Japan is at its lowest since comparable data became available in 1950 ( Getty/iStock )

Japan‘s child population has declined for the 38th year in a row and is now at a record low, the government said.

The number of children younger than 15 stood at 15.22 million on April 1, down 180,000, or 1.2 per cent, from last year, the Statistics Bureau said.


It is the lowest number since comparable data became available in 1950.


The figures were released ahead of Children’s Day on 5 May.

Japan’s birthrate has remained low amid a lack of support for working women, who continue to face the burden of homemaking and other traditional roles, as well as excessively long working hours and high education costs.

With children making up just 12.1 per cent of its population, Japan ranks lowest among countries with a population exceeding 40 million, followed by South Korea at 12.9 per cent and Italy and Germany at 13.4 per cent, according to the Statistics Bureau figures.


As of 2017, Japanese women on average gave birth to 1.43 children during their lifetimes. That compares with nearly 1.8 in the US and Britain.

According to the latest government statistics, the number of births in 2018 fell to 921,000, the lowest since Japan began recording such statistics in 1899.


Japan’s total population fell by 448,000 people, a record decline, to 126 million.

The population is forecast to fall below 100 million by 2050, barring a huge influx of immigrants.

Japan last month started allowing more foreign workers to ease a labour crunch.

Prime minister Shinzo Abe has said ageing and the low birth rate are a national crisis. He has promised labour and other reforms to help alleviate the burden on families that discourage couples from having more children.

Longer life spans in Japan have added to rising costs for elderly care and social security.
Conservative legislators in Mr Abe’s government have at times blamed the elderly or childless for long-term demographic trends.

Gaffe-prone finance minister Taro Aso had to apologise earlier this year for saying childless people are to blame for Japan’s rising social security costs and declining population.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...on-low-birth-rate-babies-ageing-a8899761.html
 
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Muslim countries need to learn from Japan, China, South Korea, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and I can go on and on.

Low fertility rate would be disastrous for Muslim countries like Turkey, Iran, Morrocco, Tunisia, Egypt, Bangladesh, Indonesia, and so on.

Turkey's Erdogan and Iran's Ayatuallah Khamanei already know it as their countries are facing a possible demographic disaster worse than Japan and Russia (if things don't improve). That's why both Turkey and Iran are desperately trying to increase their fertility rates.

Japan and Russia were rich and/or industrial giants relative to outside world when the demographic winter struck them.

Muslim countries I mentioned above are no way near being the industrial or financial giants relative to outside world, and if they are struck with demographic demise while still in their "developing" phase, then it'd be an absolute disaster.

Most Muslim countries have next 20-25 years to reverse the trends and maintain healthy fertility rates.....if they do not, they'll become old, and stagnant societies with no dynamism and below average economic and technological outputs (Unlike Europe, Russia, Japan, Korea, and China etc during their demographic winter).

Most laymen and people outside the field won't know it, but demographic projections for Muslim countries like Turkey are actually worse than Russia (even though perception is that Russia is very old, and dying while Turkey is young :) )
 
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Muslim countries need to learn from Japan, China, South Korea, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and I can go on and on.

Low fertility rate would be disastrous for Muslim countries like Turkey, Iran, Morrocco, Tunisia, Egypt, Indonesia, and so on.

Turkey's Erdogan and Iran's Ayatuallah Khamanei already know it as their countries are facing a possible demographic disaster worse than Japan and Russia (if things don't improve). That's why both Turkey and Iran are desperately trying to increase their fertility rates.

Japan and Russia were rich and/or industrial giants relative to outside world when the demographic winter struck them.

Muslim countries I mentioned above are no way near being the industrial or financial giants relative to outside world, and if they are struck with demographic demise while still in their "developing" phase, then it'd be an absolute disaster.

Most Muslim countries have next 20-25 years to reverse the trends and maintain healthy fertility rates.....if they do not, they'll become old, and stagnant societies with no dynamism and below average economic and technological outputs (Unlike Europe, Russia, Japan, Korea, and China etc during their demographic winter).

Most laymen and people outside the field won't know it, but demographic projections for Muslim countries like Turkey are actually worse than Russia (even though perception is that Russia is very old, and dying while Turkey is young :) )
Exactly the focus should be economic development not fertility control that will come automatically
 
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In other news, South Korea's TFR dropped to below 1.0.
In other news, China's recorded the lowest number of births since the Great Leap Forward in 1961.
60718250ly1g2rtlraq64j20jg2z447g.jpg

Aging population will be the greatest long-term challenge for East Asia.
 
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In other news, South Korea's TFR dropped to below 1.0.
In other news, China's recorded the lowest number of births since the Great Leap Forward in 1961.
60718250ly1g2rtlraq64j20jg2z447g.jpg

Aging population will be the greatest long-term challenge for East Asia.
China still has the world biggest population by far, the population downturn can be easily fixed by just one generation due to China's massive base population, but it's debated if China should adopt laws to encourage birth giving.
 
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China still has the world biggest population by far, the population downturn can be easily fixed by just one generation due to China's massive base population, but it's debated if China should adopt laws to encourage birth giving.

That means you simply don't understand the crux of the issue.

The issue here is aging population, not shrinking population. Japan's population is almost twice of the UK's, how many people do they need? It's about the structure of the population, not size of the population.

What they are facing now is an increasing elderly dependency ratio; not enough young people to support the elderly. Their pension and healthcare are facing strains and the state has to allocate a higher percentage of budget to support the elderly every year if they don't want to cut pension/healthcare spending.
 
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There’s always Ultraman....
 
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That means you simply don't understand the crux of the issue.

The issue here is aging population, not shrinking population. Japan's population is almost twice of the UK's, how many people do they need? It's about the structure of the population, not size of the population.

What they are facing now is an increasing elderly dependency ratio; not enough young people to support the elderly. Their pension and healthcare are facing strains and the state has to allocate a higher percentage of budget to support the elderly every year if they don't want to cut pension/healthcare spending.
That's exactly what I m talking about , to produce young population, due to China's big population base, it's much more easier for China to produce young population by put in place encouraging laws, which China hasn't due to the controversial debate.
 
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That's exactly what I m talking about , to produce young population, due to China's big population base, it's much more easier for China to produce young population by put in place encouraging laws, which China hasn't due to the controversial debate.

Huh?

It's not the number of young people, it's the proportion of young people. Big population base also means big number of elderly to support.
 
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Huh?

It's not the number of young people, it's the proportion of young people. Big population base also means big number of elderly to support.
Yes, the proportion, can be fixed in one generation or two if the government put in the policy to make it happen, China does things different from the west.
 
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