Bankruptcies, suicide rise as Japanese struggle with mounting personal debt

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

Salaries in Japan are the lowest of G-7 countries, and the central bank is raising borrowing costs.

Salaries in Japan are the lowest of G-7 countries, and its central bank is raising borrowing costs while its peers are cutting them.

PHOTO: AFP

Follow topic:

TOKYO – Personal debt is overwhelming an increasing number of Japanese as higher interest rates and the rising cost of living bite.

Consumer loans are rising at the highest rate in 16 years. Household borrowing exceeded incomes for the first time in 2023. And government officials are worried that many people accustomed to rock-bottom rates will struggle with their mounting loans. 

While Japan is by no means alone in confronting a debt problem, its salaries are the lowest of the Group of Seven (G-7) countries, and its central bank is raising borrowing costs while its peers are cutting them.

Lawyers estimate that personal bankruptcies – already the highest since the pandemic – are on track to reach the most in 2024 since 2012. And in a tragic turn, suicide rates related to debt are also climbing.

The problem is all the more remarkable given that the country is better known for savers stashing cash under the mattress rather than piling into debt.

Helplines

Mental well-being

  • Institute of Mental Health’s Mental Health Helpline: 6389-2222 (24 hours)

  • Samaritans of Singapore: 1-767 (24 hours) / 9151-1767 (24 hours CareText via WhatsApp)

  • Singapore Association for Mental Health: 1800-283-7019

  • Silver Ribbon Singapore: 6386-1928

  • Tinkle Friend: 1800-274-4788 

  • Chat, Centre of Excellence for Youth Mental Health: 6493-6500/1

  • Women’s Helpline (Aware): 1800-777-5555 (weekdays, 10am to 6pm)

Counselling

  • Touchline (Counselling): 1800-377-2252

  • Touch Care Line (for caregivers): 6804-6555

  • Care Corner Counselling Centre: 6353-1180

  • Counselling and Care Centre: 6536-6366

  • We Care Community Services: 3165-8017

Online resources

Yet average household debt rose to ¥6.55 million (S$56,000) in 2023, higher than incomes, government data showed.

Take the case of a Tokyo-based medical worker who filed for personal bankruptcy in 2023 after her consumer loans reached about ¥11 million.

The woman in her early 60s said she fell into a spiral of paying back debt, borrowing money from one lender in order to return money to a previous one, and then taking out another loan to pay that back. She asked not to be identified given the social stigma of bankruptcy.

Most consumer loans outstanding have an interest rate of 14 per cent to 16 per cent, according to Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA). The woman said she was paying as much as 18 per cent on some of her borrowings.

The surge in consumer debt underscores Japan’s delicate balancing act as the world’s fourth-largest economy emerges from decades of deflation and economic stagnation. While people are getting more confident about the future and receiving loans for house purchases and other spending, in some cases, they are borrowing as inflation drives up prices.

The ratio of household debt over average disposable income in Japan hit a record 122 per cent in 2022, according to the latest comparative figures compiled by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). That is in contrast to the US and the Britain where it has fallen over the past decade.

Huge wage gap

People are borrowing more in some of the world’s largest economies, but Japan’s relatively low salaries make the issue particularly acute. Average wages in Japan were about US$47,000 (S$63,700) in 2023, vastly behind around US$80,000 in the US, according to OECD data in dollar terms. 

“There are still companies where wages remain low, and these companies are unable to keep up with rising prices,” said Mr Takuya Hoshino, chief economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute. 

More than 70,000 people had filed for individual bankruptcy in 2023, according to a government report. Mr Shigeki Kimoto, an attorney at Shinwa Law Office in Tokyo, said that January to October court data indicates the figure may rise to between 75,000 and 80,000 in 2024.

The Bank of Japan also flagged rising household debt in its biannual financial system report in October, saying that increasing home ownership among young people exposes them to bigger interest payments.

Debt problems from multiple borrowings have been blamed as a major factor causing more people to take their own lives, with such suicides rising to 792 in 2023. The last time the figure was this high was in 2012, in the aftermath of a government crackdown on consumer lending that led to the shuttering of thousands of moneylenders, and choked off credit. 

Consumer lending has grown by 8 per cent or more every month until September 2024, according to year-on-year data from an industry group. That is the highest since it started compiling the statistics in 2008.

Mr Yoshimasa Morikawa, a spokesman at SMBC Consumer Finance, one of four big Japanese lenders in the sector, said that post-Covid consumption has boosted borrowing. It is seeing rising demand from people in their 20s due to ads on social media such as TikTok, he said. 

Gen Z borrowers

Japan’s vast pool of household savings – which amounted to more than ¥1,100 trillion as of the end of September – may provide a cushion against rising debt for some people. But younger households have far less saved than older ones. 

The country lowered the age of adulthood to 18 from 20 in 2022, increasing the pool of potential borrowers. The average amount of debt at households led by individuals up to 29 years old almost tripled to ¥9.92 million in 2023 from a decade earlier.

Officials from the FSA have warned that young people without stable incomes are vulnerable and can fall into arrears for years, especially if they take on debt without planning. 

Poor financial literacy adds to the problem. The country’s citizens had lower scores to common questions about money than people in the US and major European nations, such as the definitions of inflation and diversified investment, according to a 2022 survey from a Bank of Japan-backed industry group.  

“Some people are probably getting loans to cover the part of their living expenses that their wages can’t cover”, adding to the pressure of mortgage payments, said Ms Nana Otsuki, a senior fellow at Pictet Asset Management Japan. As the economy improves, borrowers may be hoping rising incomes will allow them to pay back debt, she said. BLOOMBERG

See more on