Demographic Woes: Crisis Grips Japan as Population Shrinks Rapidly

Fri Jun 02 2023
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TOKYO: The health ministry said on Friday that Japan’s birth rate declined for the seventh consecutive year in 2022 to a record low, underscoring the sense of crisis gripping the country as the population shrinks and ages rapidly.

According to Reuters, the fertility rate, and the average number of children born to a woman in her lifetime, was 1.2565. That compares with the previous low of 1.2601 posted in 2005 and is far below the rate of 2.07 considered necessary to maintain a stable population.

Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has made arresting the country’s sliding birth rate the top priority, and his government, despite high levels of debt, plans to earmark spending of 3.5 trillion yen a year on child care and other measures to support parents.

“The youth population would start decreasing drastically in the 2030s. The period until then is our last chance to reverse the trend of dwindling births,” he said this week while visiting a daycare facility.

The pandemic has exacerbated Japan’s demographic challenges, with fewer marriages in recent years contributing to fewer births and covid partly responsible for more deaths.

The number of newborns in Japan slid 5 per cent to 770,747 the previous year, a new low, while the number of deaths shot 9 per cent higher to a record 1.57 million, the data showed. More than 47,000 deaths in Japan the previous year were caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

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