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Japan’s population slide set to accelerate

I not only hate the Japanese,I loathe them。
As a matter of fact,I won't bat an eyelid if they ALL perish tomorrow。:azn:


That is not nice. I believe the Japanese know that. Thus they prefer Vietnamese nurses than kanji-literate ones from China, Singapore, Hong Kong, Macau or Taiwan. :lol:

Japan's revolving-door immigration policy hard-wired to fail
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This begs the question: If learning written Japanese was so important, why didn't the government hire nurses from kanji-literate China, Singapore, Hong Kong, Macau or Taiwan? Because, I guess, that would be too easy, and we'd get hordes of skilled Chinese. Undeterred by policy failure, the country being asked next for nurses is — drum roll, please — Vietnam.
 
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I was looking at how members respond to OP and I find it's time to step in to share my view.

It's quite true that the country need some new population to regenerate the economy. but It's not going to happen in decades. Japan still remains as the most conservative country in terms of immigration.


That´s right. Japan must feel the demographic pain before they ease immigration rules.
 
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Japan child population hits record low
Published time: 5 May, 2014 14:15Edited time: 5 May, 2014 14:18

Japan’s child population remains in free fall, with the number of children dropping for the 33rd year straight, Japanese media reports.

According to the latest information from the country’s internal affairs ministry, Japan has lost 160,000 children under the age of 15 since last year. As of April 1, children under 15 made up 12.8 percent of the Japanese population, the lowest ratio among 30 nations with populations of at least 40 million, according to ministry officials.

By comparison, the proportion stood at 19.5 percent in the United States, 16.4 percent in China, 15.1 percent in South Korea and 13.2 percent in Germany.

While the ratio of children to adults in Japan has been falling for four straight decades since 1974, when the ratio was 24.4 percent, the child population has fallen every year since hitting 27.6 million in 1981.

The ministry’s statistics showed that the younger the age cohort, the smaller the population figures. The number was 3.51 million for children between 12 and 14, 3.33 million between 9 and 11, 3.19 million between 6 and 8, 3.16 million between 3 and 5 and 3.14 million aged 2 and younger, Japan’s Asashi Shimbun reports.

In a country of 127.6 million people with an average life expectancy of 82.59 years, the number of children now stands at 16.33 million, 8.36 million of whom are boys and 7.97 million of whom are girls. Since 1997, seniors of 65 years or older have outnumbered children in the country.

The ministry warns the child population will continue to decline without a major increase in the number of births.
According to the Health and Welfare Ministry’s estimation released in January 2012, Japan's population is expected to decline by about one million people every year in the coming decades. Based on those projections, Japan will have a population of 87 million in 2060, 40 percent of which is expected to be over the age of 65.

Japan’s current fertility rate hovers around 1.39 births per woman — one of the lowest in the world – according to World Bank data.

Many factors have been blamed from the decline, ranging from strict immigration policy, gender inequality, and even a lack of interest in not only having children, but sexual activity among the young. According to an October 2013 Guardian report, the Japan Family Planning Association (JFPA) said that 45 percent of Japanese women aged 16-24 "were not interested in or despised sexual contact."

Twenty-five percent of Japanese men reported similar feelings
 
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I think Japan tax increase youth's burden heavier. If lower quality of parent life, why have baby ?
The biggest problem is still land scarcity in Japan islands, high cost of living.
 
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Japan’s child population remains in free fall, with the number of children dropping for the 33rd year straight, Japanese media reports.

According to the latest information from the country’s internal affairs ministry, Japan has lost 160,000 children under the age of 15 since last year. As of April 1, children under 15 made up 12.8 percent of the Japanese population, the lowest ratio among 30 nations with populations of at least 40 million, according to ministry officials.

By comparison, the proportion stood at 19.5 percent in the United States, 16.4 percent in China, 15.1 percent in South Korea and 13.2 percent in Germany.

While the ratio of children to adults in Japan has been falling for four straight decades since 1974, when the ratio was 24.4 percent, the child population has fallen every year since hitting 27.6 million in 1981.

The ministry’s statistics showed that the younger the age cohort, the smaller the population figures. The number was 3.51 million for children between 12 and 14, 3.33 million between 9 and 11, 3.19 million between 6 and 8, 3.16 million between 3 and 5 and 3.14 million aged 2 and younger, Japan’s Asashi Shimbun reports.

In a country of 127.6 million people with an average life expectancy of 82.59 years, the number of children now stands at 16.33 million, 8.36 million of whom are boys and 7.97 million of whom are girls. Since 1997, seniors of 65 years or older have outnumbered children in the country.

The ministry warns the child population will continue to decline without a major increase in the number of births.
According to the Health and Welfare Ministry’s estimation released in January 2012, Japan's population is expected to decline by about one million people every year in the coming decades. Based on those projections, Japan will have a population of 87 million in 2060, 40 percent of which is expected to be over the age of 65.

Japan’s current fertility rate hovers around 1.39 births per woman — one of the lowest in the world – according to World Bank data.

Many factors have been blamed from the decline, ranging from strict immigration policy, gender inequality, and even a lack of interest in not only having children, but sexual activity among the young. According to an October 2013 Guardian report, the Japan Family Planning Association (JFPA) said that 45 percent of Japanese women aged 16-24 "were not interested in or despised sexual contact."

Twenty-five percent of Japanese men reported similar feelings

I.39 births per woman is manageable. Birth rates increase and vary, and with increased programs in work places per se maternity leave and maternity care, we can see a stabilization.

:)

Even @Nihonjin1051 migrated to the US :rofl::rofl::rofl:

What's so funny about that? I'm not living in the 'states permanently. Most likely i'll be doing a bit of balancing in my properties in Japan and the 'states.
 
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Isn't Japan's overall population decline (expected to be 90 million at 2050) the main reason for their stagnant economy?
 
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Isn't Japan's overall population decline (expected to be 90 million at 2050) the main reason for their stagnant economy?

We're enacting policies to keep the population at minimum 100 million. Besides, 2050 is a long ways to go. lol.
 
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Japanese work too hard, and doesn't want to share the hard earned money to the next generation.
This is no good. We need our mongoloid race to have large number.
Japanese should xxx more, and declare birth control illegal.
Nurture the young is duty for all of us.
Therefore, those who evade the duty by having no children should be taxed x3 of those who have 3 or 4 children.

from MostProbableExplanation new name. got banned because of Nihonjin1051 islam thread.
 
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Noooooooooooo, Japanese women and men I give you the order to go forth and multiply with each other.

:smitten:
 
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If a beautiful Japanese girl marry me allowing me immigration benefits etc. then I will love to have 3 to 4 kid in Japan, helping them in increasing their population. :D
 
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Noooooooooooo, Japanese women and men I give you the order to go forth and multiply with each other.

:smitten:

Ha ha ha, Having 4-5 kids would be ideal, but it takes $$$ to support that many. For me, ideal would be 3-4. God Willing.:lol:
 
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If a beautiful Japanese girl marry me allowing me immigration benefits etc. then I will love to have 3 to 4 kid in Japan, helping them in increasing their population. :D
:o:

Ha ha ha, Having 4-5 kids would be ideal, but it takes $$$ to support that many. For me, ideal would be 3-4. God Willing.:lol:

We need a strong Japan!
 
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