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Japan’s population slide set to accelerate

same story in Canada.
there will be more retired people than young working people.
 
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Japan, like other First World countries, is headed for a demographic bomb of an ageing population, with the concomitant high costs of social and health services. Somebody has to pay for these costs, and the obvious choice is an army of young migrants to run the economy and fill the tax coffers.

So far, so good, but there's a catch. The migrants will change the ethnic and cultural mix of the country. Over time, as the migrants gain democratic clout and want to reduce their tax burden, they may do away with the social benefits which were the raison d'être for the migration policy in the first place.


Good observation!

Take Germany, similar situation, with population declining and aging. The German government has begun to allow medium and high-skill immigration into the country to fill the gap. At the beginning they ignored the problem until it escalated leaving them no other choice. Today immigrants are common view on the streets.

As the article suggests, Japan needs 250.000 immigrants every year.
 
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The problem is with the Baby Boomer Generation, when they got old and the Gen X and Gen Y combine didn't produce as much offspring as Baby boomer, the problem does not only exist in the Industrialist Country but rather everywhere.

The immigration solution is only temperory as they just shuffle heap of people from Population dense area (Such as China and India) and put them in low growth population. One day those dense populate will disperse and the world will reach a "Saturated" population.

When you compare to the baby birth rate per perant, you got about 4-6 in baby boomer and only 1-2 on Gen Y,THE WORLD, not just some country is losing its population. And sadly to say, in the next millenium, the 2100s, the world population is estimated to back down and unless we do something, the population will graduatelly decline
 
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The problem is with the Baby Boomer Generation, when they got old and the Gen X and Gen Y combine didn't produce as much offspring as Baby boomer, the problem does not only exist in the Industrialist Country but rather everywhere.

The immigration solution is only temperory as they just shuffle heap of people from Population dense area (Such as China and India) and put them in low growth population. One day those dense populate will disperse and the world will reach a "Saturated" population.

When you compare to the baby birth rate per perant, you got about 4-6 in baby boomer and only 1-2 on Gen Y,THE WORLD, not just some country is losing its population. And sadly to say, in the next millenium, the 2100s, the world population is estimated to back down and unless we do something, the population will graduatelly decline

Good observation, though it's not necessarily a bad thing that the world population will naturally decline in the far future as more and more baby boomers die of old age.

Barring any apocalypse, it's likely that the world population will hit its peak then decline until it eventually levels off and stabilizes.
 
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If westner countries stop taking immigrates from outside, they will meet the same problem.
 
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It seems that China is also going to face the problem of the aging population like Japan.
In 2015 China has 250 million elderly people, I heard...
 
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Japanese are the most good looking among the Asian people.

Its a shame that this great nation's population is shrinking.

The government should give incentives for people to have more kids.
 
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It is not only a question of money. France has a higher birth rate than neighboring Germany, why?
France not only offers money and tax breaks, but also has tense networks of child care centres enabling women to have babys and work.

France
Birth rate: 12.72 births/1,000 population (2012 est.)

Germany
Birth rate: 8.33 births/1,000 population (2012 est.)
 
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sadly to say, in the next millenium, the 2100s, the world population is estimated to back down and unless we do something, the population will graduatelly decline

Sadly?

 
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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.
 
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Japanese_Street_Fashion_2_by_hakanphotography.jpg


this is still called IDIOT style. Japanese society is more conservative than you think.
 
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Japan's revolving-door immigration policy hard-wired to fail
Tuesday, March 6, 2012 | The Japan Times

By DEBITO ARUDOU


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Last December, the Japanese government announced that a new visa regime with a "points system" would be introduced this spring.

It is designed to attract 2,000 non-Japanese (NJ) with a "high degree of capability" (kōdo jinzai), meaning people with high salaries, impeccable educational and vocational pedigrees, specialized technical knowledge and excellent managerial/administrative skills.

Those lucky foreign millionaire Ph.Ds beating a path to this land of opportunity would get preferential visa treatment: five-year visas, fast-tracking to permanent residency, work status for spouses — even visas to bring their parents and "hired housekeepers" along.

Sweet. But then comes the fine print: You must get 70 points on the Justice Ministry's qualifying scale (see www.moj.go.jp/content/000083223.pdf) And it's tough, really tough. Take the test and see if you qualify (I don't). Symptomatic of decisions by committee, it's a salad of idealized preferences without regard for real-world application. There's even a funny sliding scale where you get more points the longer you've worked, yet fewer points the older you get.

Interesting is how low Japanese language ability is weighted: only 10 points — in a "bonus" category. One would have assumed that people communicative in Japan's lingua franca would be highly prized (especially when the call for kōdo jinzai is in Japanese only).


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Japan´s Ministry of Justice


However, I would argue the opposite: Crowds of NJ completely fluent in Japanese are exactly what the government does not want. Visa regimes with illiterate foreigners facing insurmountable hurdles are what maintain Japan's revolving-door labor market.

For example, consider 2008's visa program to import elderly-care nurses from the Philippines and Indonesia.

These NJ were all qualified nurses in their own countries, so their only real obstacle was the Japanese language. Yet this visa program required that they pass the same nursing exam that native speakers sit. Within a time limit of three years. Otherwise they lose their visas and get sent home.

This, coupled with a full-time job (of humiliating unskilled labor, including bathing patients and setting tables) and insufficient institutional support for learning kanji, ensured they would fail. And they did: The Yomiuri (Jan. 5) reported that 95 percent of the Indonesians tested over the past three years did not pass — and more than half (even one of those who did pass) have gone home. Future applications have since dried up.

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.

Now consider another regime: 1990s nikkei South Americans' special "repatriation" visas.

The nikkei were invited to come to this country based on the assumption that somehow their Japanese blood would make them more assimilable (see Just Be Cause, April 7, 2009). Wrong. So, after nearly two decades of working full-time keeping Japan's export industries price-competitive, the nikkei were told after 2008's economic downturn that they were no longer employable. Because of — you guessed it — their lack of Japanese ability.

The government offered only 1 percent of the nikkei any retraining, and the rest for a limited time only a free plane ride home (forfeiting their unemployment insurance and pension claims, natch).

Out they went. Over the past three years, the Brazilian population alone has dropped more than 8 percent per annum, and it's accelerating. They will probably dip below the fourth-place minority (Filipinos) next year.

Now triangulate this with concurrent "trainee" and "researcher" visa regimes, bringing in even cheaper (sometimes slave-labor) NJ from all the other less-developed countries. Applicants were once again lured with false promises of "training" or "research," only to be given unskilled labor like cleaning pig sties or pounding sheet metal. And, once again, their visas only lasted one to three years. Back home they mostly went.

I think we can safely say that Japan's working-visa regimes (including, if you think about it, even the JET Programme) are deliberately designed to discourage most NJ from ever settling here. Given this context, let's now consider this new "points system."

While I am in favor of having an objective and reviewable program (for a change) for granting visas, it is still no substitute for a real immigration policy. All of Japan's visas are temporary migration policies; this new one just aims for a rich elite with a housekeeping entourage.

Not to worry: It will fail to bring in any significant numbers of foreigners. By design. For in this era of unprecedented levels of international migration, think about the incentives available to all governments to use exclusivity as a weapon.

Here's what I mean: One of the prerogatives of a sovereign nation-state is the ability to make laws about who is a "member" of its society (i.e., a citizen) and who isn't (i.e., a foreigner).

Axiomatic is that citizens have full rights and foreigners have fewer, meaning that the latter is in a weakened position in society.

This is how countries exploit people: Give them visas that don't let them get too settled, because foreigners who stay indefinitely might put down roots, agitate for more rights as contributors to society, even — shudder — take out citizenship and expect to be treated like citizens.

So Japan's visa regimes use criteria that practically guarantee foreigners stay disenfranchised — such as low language ability. After all, an unassimilated foreign populace without the means to communicate their needs remains the perpetual "other." Then you can siphon off their best working years, send them home with a simple visa nonrenewal, and never have to pay back their social contributions and investments.

But if a nation-state can set boundaries on membership, it must also set criteria for how people can surmount those boundaries and graduate into becoming members — in this case, making foreigners into Japanese citizens.

If it doesn't, it becomes clear that the goal is to deliberately create a weakened subset of the labor force that can be politically disenfranchised and permanently exploited. This can go on for generations, as the zainichi Koreans and Chinese might attest.

However, for Japan these visa scams are no longer sustainable. Demographically, Japan needs more laborers to pay its taxes, work its factories and service sectors, and support its aging society. It needs measures to make Japan open enough to get people to stay — like, for instance, a law against racial discrimination, protecting residents regardless of nationality from prejudice and inequality. But no.

Still, it really doesn't matter now, because the jig is up. With decades of economic stagnation and now falling incomes, people are staying away from Japan. After an unbroken rise for 48 years, the registered NJ population in 2011 dropped for the third consecutive year.

International labor is bypassing Japan for other rich countries — those with more accommodating labor practices, more open import/export markets, a more internationally useful language to learn, and a less irradiated food chain.

Japan has the option to believe that immigrants do not belong in Japan's future. On the other hand, potential immigrants have the option to watch from afar as Japan withers into an economic backwater. Again, by design.

Discussions on this issue can be found at debito.org/?p=9848 and debito.org/?p=9809. Debito Arudou's latest book is "In Appropriate" (www.debito.org: Info on how to order IN APPROPRIATE: A novel of culture, kidnapping, and revenge in modern Japan) Twitter arudoudebito. Just Be Cause appears on the first Community Page of the month. Send your comments to community@japantimes.co.jp

 
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