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In Japan: Number of newborn babies rises in 2015 for 1st time since 2010

Aepsilons

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TOKYO —

The estimated number of newborn babies in Japan in 2015 rose by around 4,000 from the previous year to 1,008,000, marking the first increase since 2010, the health ministry said Thursday.

The ministry’s estimates also showed the number of people who died in 2015 totaled 1,302,000, up 29,000 from a year earlier. As a result, the natural population decline, calculated by deducting the number of deaths from that of births, stood at a record 294,000.

The Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare attributed the rise to an improvement in employment conditions and government efforts to boost day care services as well as an increase in the number of births among women in their early 30s in the first half of 2015.

But the overall trend of a decline in the number of children is expected to continue with a fall in the population of women of reproductive age.

The number of newborn babies, which hit more than 2 million annually in the 1970s, dropped below 1.5 million in 1984 and below 1.1 million in 2005, the health ministry data showed.

On the other hand, the number of deaths topped 1.3 million for the first time in 2015, resulting in a natural population decline for the ninth consecutive year. The top four leading causes of death in the country were cancer, heart disease, pneumonia and cerebrovascular disease.

The number of couples that got married in 2015 stood at 635,000, down about 9,000 from 2014 and marking a record low for postwar Japan. Divorced couples numbered 225,000, up around 3,000.

On average, a person was born every 31 seconds and a person died every 24 seconds. Couples got married every 50 seconds and divorced every 140 seconds.

No. of newborn babies rises in 2015 for 1st time since 2010 ‹ Japan Today: Japan News and Discussion
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@Steve781 @somsak --- as I have said and alluded to, increasing the live births will be the ultimate solution to our population crisis. Anyways, one positive step ! :)
 
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Its a small step, but i suppose this growth is a reflection of the recent policy changes. Its a great step forward to solving a long term problem. :)

Which problem will be solved by raising population growth ?
 
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Which problem will be solved by raising population growth ?

  1. The population decline crisis
  2. Japanese labor force
  3. Japanese intellectual contribution (this is dependent on numbers of Japanese students)
  4. Japanese military

Ultimately the goal is to maintain our population at the 110-120 million level.
 
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Good, the politicians should do everything to rise this positive trend. :tup:

Hopefully by next year we can see 10,000 more births. :)

1359997374959344.jpg
 
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  1. The population decline crisis
  2. Japanese labor force
  3. Japanese intellectual contribution (this is dependent on numbers of Japanese students)
  4. Japanese military
Ultimately the goal is to maintain our population at the 110-120 million level.

Its already 123 millions I guess.

Good Initiative. :cheers:
 
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Hope it will be further increased.
Would be a shame to see Japan fall because of a population loss.
(Dont do it like us steppe people)
 
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Hope it will be further increased.
Would be a shame to see Japan fall because of a population loss.
(Dont do it like us steppe people)


Thank you brother ! The Altaic people must remain strong and ...numerous ;)
 
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The ministry’s estimates also showed the number of people who died in 2015 totaled 1,302,000, up 29,000 from a year earlier. As a result, the natural population decline, calculated by deducting the number of deaths from that of births, stood at a record 294,000.

Not good enough.Japan needs to change its policy towards immigration.
 
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TOKYO —

The estimated number of newborn babies in Japan in 2015 rose by around 4,000 from the previous year to 1,008,000, marking the first increase since 2010, the health ministry said Thursday.

The ministry’s estimates also showed the number of people who died in 2015 totaled 1,302,000, up 29,000 from a year earlier. As a result, the natural population decline, calculated by deducting the number of deaths from that of births, stood at a record 294,000.

The Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare attributed the rise to an improvement in employment conditions and government efforts to boost day care services as well as an increase in the number of births among women in their early 30s in the first half of 2015.

But the overall trend of a decline in the number of children is expected to continue with a fall in the population of women of reproductive age.

The number of newborn babies, which hit more than 2 million annually in the 1970s, dropped below 1.5 million in 1984 and below 1.1 million in 2005, the health ministry data showed.

On the other hand, the number of deaths topped 1.3 million for the first time in 2015, resulting in a natural population decline for the ninth consecutive year. The top four leading causes of death in the country were cancer, heart disease, pneumonia and cerebrovascular disease.

The number of couples that got married in 2015 stood at 635,000, down about 9,000 from 2014 and marking a record low for postwar Japan. Divorced couples numbered 225,000, up around 3,000.

On average, a person was born every 31 seconds and a person died every 24 seconds. Couples got married every 50 seconds and divorced every 140 seconds.

No. of newborn babies rises in 2015 for 1st time since 2010 ‹ Japan Today: Japan News and Discussion
-----------------------------------------



@Steve781 @somsak --- as I have said and alluded to, increasing the live births will be the ultimate solution to our population crisis. Anyways, one positive step ! :)
Immigration is not the solution unless Japan wants to replace its native populace and mix them out of existence.
 
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Births ticked up in 2015 but population still shrinking
TOKYO -- Annual births in Japan likely increased for the first time in five years in 2015 amid policies aiming to reverse the decline, though this was not enough to counter a rise in deaths.

Estimates released Thursday by the nation's health ministry put the number of births at 1,008,000 for the year. This is 4,000 more than in 2014, which saw the fewest births since data collection began in 1899.



More children were born to mothers in their 30s. A ministry representative said this could reflect an improving employment environment as well as government support for child-rearing, including the addition of more child care facilities.


Deaths reached a postwar high of 1,302,000 -- 29,000 more than in 2014. Deaths outpaced births for a ninth straight year, with the gap widening by 25,000 to a record 294,000.

Despite the slight increase in births, 2015 still saw the second-lowest figure on record. The ministry expects the population to continue declining for now in light of the low birthrate and the graying of society.

The top four causes of death, accounting for about 60% of the total, remained unchanged for a fifth straight year. Cancer led the list, causing 370,000 deaths. Heart attacks and heart disease ranked second at 199,000, followed by pneumonia at 123,000. Strokes and other cerebrovascular diseases came in fourth at 113,000. Stillbirths fell by about 1,000 to 23,000.

Marriages declined by 9,000 to a postwar low of 635,000, continuing a steady drop from the annual peak of more than 1 million seen in the early 1970s. This owes to the declining number of people of marrying age, the ministry said.

Divorces rose for the first time in six years, climbing by 3,000 to 225,000. The figure had been in an overall downtrend since hitting a postwar high of 289,836 in 2002.

The annual estimates are calculated based on preliminary statistics through October, among other data.

(Nikkei)
 
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