Japanese population falls at fastest pace amid demographic crisis
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With Japan’s population shrinking, there are fewer taxpayers to support the growing ranks of the elderly.
PHOTO: AFP
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TOKYO – The number of Japanese citizens fell at the fastest clip in 2023 since data collection began in the 1960s, adding pressure on the nation’s social security system and shrinking labour market.
The population of Japanese nationals dropped
While the foreign population increased 11 per cent to hit three million for the first time, it was not enough to make up for the shortfall in Japanese nationals. The overall population shrank by 0.4 per cent.
A diminishing population poses multiple challenges for the country, including a labour shortage.
While the country’s unemployment rate consistently stands below 3 per cent – the lowest among developed nations – many businesses are facing severe manpower constraints.
There are nearly three openings for every worker looking for a job in the service sector, while the market is squeezed even more among construction firms.
A record 260 companies went bankrupt in 2023 as they could not secure enough workers to maintain their operations, according to a report by Teikoku Databank.
The latest data showed the working-age population as a percentage of the overall population remained almost flat from the previous year, as a rising number of foreign workers managed to fill the gap.
Still, it is unclear if Japan can continue to accommodate the same pace of foreign inflow without adequate structural support.
Another concern is the pressure on the nation’s social security system, with fewer taxpayers to support the growing ranks of the elderly.
Japan’s tax and insurance premium revenue is projected to decrease by about 10 per cent by 2040, according to a 2018 estimate by Takero Doi. That is likely to make it more complicated for the country to finance expanding social security expenses.
To push up the nation’s declining birthrate, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida pledged to lift the government’s support per child to a level on a par with Sweden, where 3.4 per cent of the gross domestic product is allocated to family benefits. BLOOMBERG

