Tag: Hirokazu Matsuno

  • Japan’s population declined by more than 500,000 in 2022

    Japan’s population declined by more than 500,000 in 2022

    According to government data issued on Wednesday, Japan’s population has decreased for the 12th straight year as deaths have increased and the birth rate has continued to decline.

    According to statistics, there were 124.49 million people in the country in 2022, down 556,000 from the year before.

    That number reflects both the flow of people entering and leaving the country as well as the natural change in population brought on by deaths and births.

    According to Cabinet Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno, the natural change last year was the largest on record, with a decline of 731,000 people, softened by the surge of individuals entering Japan, which gave an increase of 175,000.

    “It is essential to take firm measures to address the declining birthrate, which is a major factor in the decline in population, as one of the top priority issues to be addressed,” said Matsuno.

    Japan has one of the lowest birth rates in the world, as well as one of the highest life expectancies; in 2020, nearly one in 1,500 people in Japan were age 100 or older, according to government data.

    That means a swelling elderly population, shrinking workforce, and not enough young people to fill in the gaps – posing a demographic crisis decades in the making.

    The trend is seen across the country, with all of Japan’s 47 prefectures except Tokyo reporting a decline in residents last year, according to the data released Wednesday. One village in central Japan recorded just one newborn child in 25 years – a birth that was heralded as a miracle for the town’selderly residents.

    The situation is so dire that Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida warned lawmakers in January that the country is “on the brink of not being able to maintain social functions” due to the falling birth rate.

    He added that child-rearing support was the government’s “most important policy,” and solving the issue “simply cannot wait any longer.”

    Some researchers and climate scientists argue that population decline could benefit our battered ecosystems and lower emissions as the climate crisis worsens. But it also spells trouble for countries like Japan, with fewer workers to fund pensions and healthcare, and fewer people to look after the elderly.

    In April, Japan launched its new Children and Families Agency, which focuses on measures to support parents such as establishing more daycare centers, and provides youth services such as counseling.

    Previous similar initiatives, often carried out by local authorities, have so far failed to turn things around.

    Busy urban lifestyles and long working hours leave little time for some Japanese to start families, and the rising costs of living that mean having a baby is simply too expensive for many young people.

    In 2022, Japan was ranked one of the world’s most expensive places to raise a child, according to research from financial institution Jefferies. And yet, the country’s economy has stalled since the early 1990s, meaning frustratingly low wages and little upward mobility.

    The drop in the number of Japanese nationals in the past year also highlights the government’s deeply conservative views on immigration. Foreigners accounted for just 2.2% of the population in 2021, according to the Japanese government, compared to 13.6% in the United States.

    These attitudes are widespread among the public, too; a 2021 study by the Pew Research Center found that about half of Japanese adults say having a diverse society makes their country a worse place to live – though this percentage is lower than in previous years.

  • Japan warns China not to violate airspace violation

    Japan warns China not to violate airspace violation

    The Japanese defence ministry “strongly suspects” that Chinese spy balloons have three times since 2019 violated Japanese airspace.

    As new information emerged suggesting that unidentified aerial objects that had entered Japanese airspace in recent years were probably Chinese spy balloon flights, Japan issued a warning to China that violations of its airspace by surveillance balloons were “totally unacceptable.”

    “As a result of further investigation of specific balloon-shaped flying objects that were confirmed in Japan’s airspace in the past, it is strongly suspected that they were unmanned surveillance balloons from China,” Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirokazu Matsuno told reporters on Wednesday.

    Japan’s defence ministry said on Tuesday that it “strongly suspects” Chinese surveillance balloons had entered Japanese territory at least three times since 2019.

    The ministry also said that it had “strongly demanded China’s government confirm the facts” of the incident and “that such a situation not occur again in the future”.

    “Violations of airspace by foreign unmanned reconnaissance balloons and other means are totally unacceptable,” the ministry added.

    Japan’s government is now considering relaxing requirements on the use of weapons by its armed forces in order to defend against intrusions of its airspace, the Kyodo news agency reported on Wednesday.

    Relaxing the rules on engagement would allow Japan to shoot down aerial objects that violate its airspace. Currently, Japanese forces can only open fire in cases of legitimate self-defence or to avoid clear and present danger, Kyodo news agency reported.

    Beijing hit back on Wednesday, saying Japan lacked proof to support its accusations.

    “Japan is making groundless accusations and smearing China without conclusive evidence. We are resolutely opposed to that,” China’s foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin told reporters.

    Japan’s reassessment of past intrusions into its airspace has heightened since the United States shot down a Chinese balloon this month and briefed officials from 40 nations about the object, including Japan.

    In the wake of the incident, the US military adjusted radar settings to detect smaller objects and discovered three more unidentified craft that US President Joe Biden also ordered shot down – one over Alaska, another over Canada and the third over Lake Huron off Michigan.