May
21st
  3:09:07 AM

Children’s Day bleaker each year in Japan

May 5 is Kodomo no Hi, or Children’s Day in Japan – a national holiday. The custom is to fly the carp-shaped koinobori flags, one for each child. But as a recent report from AP points out, each year for the past 28 years there have been fewer and fewer children to enjoy the holiday. Japan has the lowest percentage of children amongst 31 major countries – only 13%, compared to 20% in the United States.

But the number over 65 is currently 22.5% and rising. By about 2020, the percentage of children will fall below 11% and the percentage of elderly to 29%. Low birthrates and high life expectancy are already putting strains on government services, pension programs, and labour supply.

So far, government efforts to boost the birth rate have been utterly unsuccessful. Still, with the fashion for stimulus packages, Prime Minister Taro Aso is pushing for more financial support for child birth and an expansion of neonatal intensive care units. But a loosening of Japanese rigid immigration laws is still not on the cards. To help ease the looming labour shortage, the retirement age is gradually being extended from 60 to 65, and it could reach 70. ~ Miami Herald, May 5

 

Bookmark and Share
 
about this blog | Bookmark and Share

Search this blog

 Subscribe to Demography is Destiny
rss RSS feed of posts
or get posts by email

 Recent Posts
Putting gendercide on the front page
11 Mar 2010
Female mortality matters
4 Mar 2010
Positive signs from the UN
23 Feb 2010
Vanishing Females in Vietnam
18 Jan 2010
China wakes up to consequences of one-child policy
15 Jan 2010

 MercatorNet blogs
Style and culture: Tiger Print
Family social policy: Family Edge
US political scene: Sheila Liaugminas
News about bioethics: BioEdge

 Archive
Mar 2010 | Feb 2010 | Jan 2010 | Dec 2009 | more >>

 From MercatorNet's home page

Is it a pig or a mouse pig?
19 Mar 2010
Does the public have the right to know about genetically modified meat?

Greeks resigned to tightening belts
19 Mar 2010
"Either we eradicate the debt, or the debt will eliminate the country," says the Prime Minister.

Some bright ideas just don’t work
19 Mar 2010
The contribution of atheism to the sum of the world’s happiness has been very meagre indeed.

The gathering storm
18 Mar 2010
The scandal of sexual abuse by priests in Europe is distracting us from an even bigger scandal in the future,…

Lessons from the twilight days of the liberal consensus
16 Mar 2010
An inspiring candidate has become a failing president. But a comparison with Lyndon B Johnson shows that the reasons for…


 Tags
children, Brazil, population control, birth rate, austria, Middle East, investment, ageing, Russia, Ethiopia, youth bulge, Al Gore, climate change, development, sex selection, bride shortage, demographic dividend, nursing homes, Copenhagen, Denmark, gender imbalance, population aging, fertility, sex selective abortion, fertitily, Vietnam, India, security, morocco, Korea, ageing population, Nigeria, population decline, increasing birth rates, Viagra, one-child policy, United Kingdom, Muslim-Christian demography, Muslim, Islam, Jonathan Sacks, Britain, The Economist, USA, workforce shortage, over-population, South Korea, sustainable development, aging, Australia, Africa, Europe, low fertility trap, Uganda, poverty, homosexuality, population, Latvia, UN, Paul Ehrlich, life expectancy, sex ratio, abortion, religion, family planning, military, Sweden, UNFPA, demography, falling fertility, Bangladesh, environment, European Union, pensions, immigration, shortages, Optimum Population Trust, Roger Short, pro-natalism, unemployment, China, population bomb, overpopulation, democracy, gendercide, history, Japan,