Japan's Population Plummets to Record Low in 2024
Japan's population crisis deepened in 2024, with the country experiencing its largest-ever annual population decline. The accelerating drop highlights ongoing challenges in addressing low birth rates and an aging society, particularly evident in urban centers like Tokyo.
Japan’s precipitous population decline shows no sign of
slowing, with the nation shrinking by more than 900,000 people last year – the
biggest annual drop on record, according to government data.
The data, released by the Ministry of Internal Affairs and
Communications on Wednesday, showed that the number of Japanese nationals fell
by 908,574 in 2024, bringing the total population to 120 million.
Since peaking at 126.6 million in 2009, the population has
declined for 16 consecutive years, diminished by various factors like a
struggling economy and deep-seated gender norms.
With the population of Japanese nationals set to continue
declining for decades, the country will feel the impact on its pension and healthcare systems, as well as other social infrastructure that is difficult to
maintain with a shrinking workforce.
The government has been trying to fight the decline for more
than a decade, with efforts accelerating in recent years as the full scale of
the crisis became clear – doing everything from offering childbirth and housing
subsidies to encouraging fathers to take paternity leave.
Japan’s population crisis was years in the making – and
relief may be decades away.
But each year, fewer babies are born, and more deaths are
recorded – a vicious cycle and a symptom of a population skewing older and
older. The proportion of the elderly is too high – accounting for nearly 30% of the
entire population, according to the new data – while the proportion of younger
adults, of childbearing and working age, is continually shrinking.
Last year was no exception. The number of births recorded,
at just 687,689, was the lowest among records going back to 1968 – while the
number of deaths, at nearly 1.6 million, was the highest on record.
The working-age population, defined as between 15 to 64,
made up only 59% of the population in Japan last year – far lower than the
global average of 65%, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD).
This decline has been decades in the making, thanks to
Japan’s consistently low fertility rate since the 1970s. Because of this,
sociologists and demographers say, there’s no quick fix – and it’s not
reversible.
Even if Japan manages to boost its fertility rate
dramatically and immediately – which is a big “if” – its population is bound to
keep decreasing for at least several more decades until the skewed young-old
ratio balances out, and the babies being born now reach childbearing age
themselves.
Experts have pointed to Japan’s high cost of living,
stagnant economy and wages, limited space, and demanding work culture as
reasons fewer people are opting to date, marry, or have children.
For women, economic costs are not the only turn-off. Japan
remains a highly patriarchal society in which married women are often expected
to take the caregiver role, despite government efforts to get husbands more
involved. Single parents are far less common in Japan than in many Western
countries.
Many of these issues are also plaguing other East Asian
nations with their own population woes, including China and South Korea.
This community’s quarter century without a newborn shows the
scale of Japan’s population crisis
One possible solution, experts have pointed out, would be to
plug the gap by welcoming more immigrants – a controversial topic in Japan, a
largely conservative country that perceives itself as ethnically homogenous.
Foreign residents and Japanese nationals of mixed ethnicity have long
complained of xenophobia, racism and discrimination.
But the government has leaned into this option, launching a
new digital nomad visa and crafting a new plan to upskill foreign workers. And
there are signs it may be taking effect; the number of foreign residents in
Japan increased by more than 10% last year to a record high of 3.6 million
people, according to the new data.
According to government models, which were most recently
revised in 2023, Japan’s population will fall by 30% by 2070 – but by then,
“the pace of population decline is expected to slow down slightly, mainly due
to the increase in international migration.”

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