Japan is facing a serious problem of an aging population due to low birth rates and increased life expectancy. Over 20% of Japan's population is already elderly, projected to rise to 40% by 2055, which will place significant economic burdens on social security and workforce shortages. The government has implemented policies to encourage childbirth through parental leave incentives and allowing elderly employment. However, more effective long-term solutions are also needed, such as facilitating skilled immigration to address an aging workforce.
Japan is facing a serious problem of an aging population due to low birth rates and increased life expectancy. Over 20% of Japan's population is already elderly, projected to rise to 40% by 2055, which will place significant economic burdens on social security and workforce shortages. The government has implemented policies to encourage childbirth through parental leave incentives and allowing elderly employment. However, more effective long-term solutions are also needed, such as facilitating skilled immigration to address an aging workforce.
Japan is facing a serious problem of an aging population due to low birth rates and increased life expectancy. Over 20% of Japan's population is already elderly, projected to rise to 40% by 2055, which will place significant economic burdens on social security and workforce shortages. The government has implemented policies to encourage childbirth through parental leave incentives and allowing elderly employment. However, more effective long-term solutions are also needed, such as facilitating skilled immigration to address an aging workforce.
Japan is facing a serious problem of an aging population due to low birth rates and increased life expectancy. Over 20% of Japan's population is already elderly, projected to rise to 40% by 2055, which will place significant economic burdens on social security and workforce shortages. The government has implemented policies to encourage childbirth through parental leave incentives and allowing elderly employment. However, more effective long-term solutions are also needed, such as facilitating skilled immigration to address an aging workforce.
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Japans Aging Society
Japans Aging Society
In approximately 0.42 second, Google could give us 10900000 results if you tap these three simple words: Japan-Aging-Population. From all perspectives, Japan is indeed the best example of a stage 5 MEDC country having an aging population. With a death rate of 9.15 and a birth rate of 8.39, we can definitely confirm that the country is facing a serious problem. However obvious this fact may be, we still need to question ourselves: what are the causes of this Issue? What consequences does it have? And what can be done?
Causes: Not Surprising but still Complicated The reasons of Japans aging population are not very surprising. By one hand, the change of lifestyle and social conventions results in a change of behavior in regards to marriage. Psychological pressure from the workplace; lack of human contact in an ultra-modern society; the tendency of young women having a life centered on friends, career, consumption and entertainment (the Parasite Singles), all these are factors preventing traditional union and deteriorating peoples willingness of having children. Adding to these is the fact that the development of birth control methods like legal abortion led to a lower birth rate. By the other hand, the improvement of medicine and hygiene led to longer life expectancy in Japan, which is actually among the highest in the world (76.4 years for men and 82.2 years for women). So, the main cause of the aging population is the combination of low fertility and long life expectancy. Whats at Stake? Due to the abovementioned reasons, the Japanese population is facing the risk of falling
By 25% between 2005 and 2050 according to projections, losing approximately 30 Million people in the process. With the elderly of the country already making up 20% of the population and noting that this number is projected to increase to almost 40% by 2055, the aging population is heavily penalising the Japanese society. And these negative consequences will come faster than predicted, as 23.1% of the population are already 65 or over, including 11.4% of the Japanese population who have an age greater than 75, which counts for the world's highest ratio.
The aging society or kreikashakai, as we put it in Japanese, is not just a matter of statistics, it influenced the Japanese economy as well, which suffered major blows from the Asian economic crisis in the 1990s and is still slowly recovering. National debts and deficits rising, social security in burden, lack of young people in important sectors, none of these seems promising at a time of global competition.
So many things at stake, whats the solution then?
"The problem won't be solved unless you let them hurry up and die."
"Heaven forbid if you are forced to live on when you want to die. I would wake up feeling increasingly bad knowing that [treatment] was all being paid for by the government," said Taro Aso, finance minister of Japan during a meeting of the national council on social security reforms in 2013. "The problem won't be solved unless you let them hurry up and die."
But knowing perfectly that this brilliant idea of His Excellency the minister wont be feasible, the Japanese government has been implementing other measures either to provide pro-natal incentives or to relieve the economic burden coming from the elderly.
To achieve that, the government is changing the policies around working conditions for parents and is providing 8 weeks of paternity leave or 5 days of leave whenever a child falls sick. Different companies also extended the employment of the elderly, a decision thanks to which we can see now many people that are between 70 and 80 years old still working. To facilitate the employment of the elderly, the government authorized the accumulation of an
employment and a pension, which is a notable economic incentive.
But at the same time, the competent authorities should also realize that other effective measures could be taken right now. An aging population brings an aging workface and then a possible solution is to facilitate reasonable immigration of skilled workers from other countries, because having more and more children at a national level takes time and a constant population growth is also not sustainable.
To conclude, a demographic issue like aging society is becoming a global challenge. Its not an issue that can be easily tackled either by having more and more children or by letting the elderly hurry up. Maybe just as the Asian notion mean suggests, the Japanese government needs to find the right equilibrium between sustainable development, internal solutions and having foreign labors.
Wing Hin Ho, Jianan Liu, Raphael Pichtler, Xoxoxox