Disaster As Japan’s birth rate falls to a record low, a ‘critical’ demographic crisis unfolds - Still preferable than mass-importing brownies

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Record-low births and an ageing population are driving Japan to implement urgent measures to encourage marriage and boost fertility rates.

Japan is facing a severe demographic crisis, marked by a historic low in its birth rate alongside a rapidly ageing population. In 2024, the number of babies born in the country fell to 686,061, marking the first time this figure has dropped below 700,000 since record-keeping began in 1899, according to a health ministry announcement on Wednesday.

Births dropped by 41,227, or 5.7 per cent, from the previous year. It was only two years ago, in 2022, that the figure fell below the 800,000 birth threshold.

A ministry official said the situation was “critical” as “multiple complex factors are preventing individuals from fulfilling their hopes of marriage and starting families,” The Asahi newspaper reported.

The country’s demographic crisis is advancing 15 years ahead of experts’ predictions, who had forecast around 755,000 births for 2024, and did not anticipate that births would fall below 690,000 until 2039.

Additionally, Japan’s total fertility rate – the average number of children a woman is expected to have in her lifetime – dropped to a historic low of 1.15, down from 1.20 the previous year, underscoring the country’s ongoing trend of delayed marriage and childbirth.

Both the birth and fertility rates have decreased for nine consecutive years. The figures exclude foreign nationals born in Japan and Japanese born outside the country.

Japan also saw a record high of 1,605,298 deaths in 2024, a 1.9 per cent increase from the previous year. This led to a population loss of 919,237 people, marking the 18th consecutive year of decline and the largest recorded.

The country did see a modest rebound in the number of marriages, a key factor influencing future birth trends. Last year, 485,063 couples got married, up 2.2 per cent from 2023, while divorces rose 1.1 per cent to more than 185,000 cases.

Many young people in Japan are delaying marriage and childbirth for a variety of reasons, ranging from fragile job security to changing social values that place less emphasis on marriage.

To address the demographic decline, the government has implemented multiple countermeasures, including raising youth wages and expanding childcare support programmes.

In 2023, the Tokyo metropolitan government launched an AI-driven app to boost marriage, playing the role of cupid among millions of unmarried residents. However, this initiative sparked controversy over whether the government should allocate funds to such programmes instead of addressing the needs of poorer families or single parents.

Japan has also turned to young foreigners as a source of labour, but the government has maintained a strict immigration policy, only allowing overseas workers entry on a temporary basis.

“We understand that the declining birth rate is continuing because many people who wish to raise children are not able to fulfil their wishes,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi said at an April press briefing.

“We will promote comprehensive measures to realise a society where everyone who wishes to have children can have children and raise them with peace of mind,” he added.
 
Japan’s total fertility rate – the average number of children a woman is expected to have in her lifetime – dropped to a historic low of 1.15,
So they're at the rate South Korea was at a few years ago, and just below Taiwan's rate. Korea has since dropped to around 0.75 and seems to still be dropping.

The best cultures in Asia are basically going extinct within a couple generations.
The country’s demographic crisis is advancing 15 years ahead of experts’ predictions,
The faster it moves, the harder it's going to be to care for all the elderly in Japan who don't have grandkids to take care of them.

Life expectancy in Japan is around 84 yrs old.
 
Japan already has immigration, from China, Vietnam, and the Philippines, on top of the existing and large Korean and Brazilian communities.

The problem is that Westerners want to bring in Indians, Muslims, and Blacks to Japan.

That's the point I'm getting here, Japanese people are xenophobic that is true, but they already tolerate immigrants from certain places that they have had a long history with.

The other component is that a lot of these existing migrant communities assimilate into Japanese society and eventually blend in.
 
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Would help to tone down their horrific work culture
Yeah, Japan is only marginally behind South Korea in that regard and quite a number of South Korean women have said some variant of "my life has been a nightmare of endless schooling, training, and an extremely competitive work environment and I refuse to subject offspring to such an existence."

It's fucking grim.
 
Get rid of pensions.

Your only pension in old age is your kids.

Have a lot of kids, raise them well, and BE NICE TO THEM or else you’re dying alone in the gutter.

It’s the only way.
Lifetime share in earnings of children (conditional on not abusing them)
Parents are incentivized to become net-value-of-children-maximizers
 
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