Introduction
In 2010, Japan's population reached 128.1 million people
By 2020, the population had decreased to 125.8 million people
Japan has a population change rate of -0.3%
This is a combination of a low birth rate and an ageing population
Low Birth Rate
The fertility rate in Japan is 1.36 births per woman, well below the fertility replacement rate of 2.1
The birth rate is 7.1 per 1000 people
The reasons for the low birth rate include:
increasing numbers of women focusing on careers and delaying having children
inability to afford buying/renting own home (70% of unmarried people live with their parents)
declining marriage rate and increase in average age people get married (women 29.5 years, men 31 years)
economic insecurity: jobs are not as secure
the expense of children is high due to childcare costs
Ageing population
The death rate has increased in Japan from a low of 6 per 1000 in 1982 to 11 per 1000 in 2020
In that time, life expectancy has increased from an average of 77 years to 84.36 years
This means the increased death rate is not due to poorer healthcare, diet or standard of living but because the population is ageing
One-third of the population is over 60 years old and over 12% are over 75
Older people are more likely to become unwell and die
The older the population, the higher the proportion of people who will die
Impacts
Shortage of workers
With increasing numbers of the population being retired, there are not enough workers to replace them
Fewer innovations
Closure of some services
Higher taxes
An ageing population puts more pressure on health service and pension payments
There is predicted to be a shortage of 380,000 workers for elderly care by 2025
Taxes have to be increased to pay for healthcare and pensions
School closures
Fewer children mean that schools and childcare facilities may close with the loss of jobs
An average of 450 schools close each year due to falling numbers
Economic stagnation
The economy does not grow due to a lack of workers and the closure of businesses and industry
The standard of living does not improve or falls
Solutions
Development of robots to help with elderly care, such as in the Shin-tomi nursing home in Tokyo
Immigration laws were revised in 2018 to attract foreign workers and help with the worker shortage
The aim is to attract 340,000 new workers
The Angel Plan was a five-year plan in 1994 to increase the birth rate, followed by the New Angel Plan in 1999 and Plus One Policy in 2009, these all aimed to encourage people to have children by;
improving the work environment to fit with family responsibilities
better childcare services
improved maternity and child health services
better housing for families
improved education facilities
Plus One Proposal is the most recent policy and aims to increase 'parent-friendly' working and the construction of 50,000 new daycare facilities



















How is Japan’s aging population impacting its economy and social services?
What policies has Japan implemented to address low birth rates?
How does urbanization affect population distribution in Japan?
What role does immigration play in Japan’s demographic challenges?
How does Japan’s population trend compare to other developed countries?
What are the social and cultural effects of a shrinking workforce?
How does Japan’s population decline affect rural communities?
Keywords
Population Decline
Aging Population
Low Birth Rate
Fertility Rate
Urbanization
Immigration Policy
Workforce Shrinkage
Rural Depopulation
Elderly Care
Pension System
Gender Roles
Family Structure
Population Density
Demographic Transition
Japan Demographics
Social Security
Population Projections
Labor Market
Health Care System
Technological Innovation