Japan's Births Fell to Record Low in 2024
- The number of newborns in Japan fell 5 percent in 2024 to 720,988, marking the lowest tally since records began in 1899, according to Japan's health ministry.
- Deaths in Japan rose to a record high of 1.62 million, resulting in the largest annual population decline ever seen, as indicated in the report.
- The number of marriages in Japan increased by 2.2 percent to 499,999, compared to the previous year's 90-year low, according to a Japanese survey.
- By 2070, Japan's population is projected to decrease by about 30 percent to 87 million, with an expectation that four out of every ten people will be 65 or older.
56 Articles
56 Articles
Japan's birth crisis is a leadership failure
Japan’s plummeting birth rate is not just a demographic crisis; it is a political failure of leadership with no easy solution. The sharp decline in births—dropping to 720,988 in 2024, the lowest recorded in 125 years—has exposed the impotence of Japanese government intervention and the lack of vision among those in power. Policymakers have repeatedly […] The post Japan’s birth crisis is a leadership failure appeared first on Asia Times.
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