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Everything you need to know about Japan's population crisis
Article here. Excerpt:
'he Japanese now have one of the lowest fertility rates in the world, and at the same time, one of the highest longevity rates. As a result, the population is dropping rapidly, and becoming increasingly weighted toward older people. After peaking seven years ago, at 128 million, Japan's population has been falling — and is on a path to decline by about a million people a year. By 2060, the government estimates, there will be just 87 million people in Japan; nearly half of them will be over 65. Without a dramatic change in either the birthrate or its restrictive immigration policies, Japan simply won't have enough workers to support its retirees, and will enter a demographic death spiral. Yet the babies aren't coming.
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There are both cultural and economic barriers. In Japanese tradition, marriage was more about duty than romantic love. Arranged marriages were the norm well into the 1970s, and even into the 1990s most marriages were facilitated by "go-betweens," often the grooms' bosses. Left to their own devices, Japanese men aren't sure how to find wives — and many are shying away from the hunt, because they simply can't afford it. Wages have stagnated since the 1990s, while housing prices have shot up. A young Japanese man has good reason to believe that his standard of living would drop immensely if he had to house and support a wife and children — especially considering that his wife likely wouldn't be working.
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In Japan, marriage usually ends a woman's working career, even though most women are well educated. Once they have a child, women face strong social pressure to quit their jobs and assume very traditional roles, serving both the husband and the child. Mothers who want to keep working are stigmatized and usually find that employers won't hire them. Child care is scarce and expensive, while Japan's brutal work culture often demands that employees work more than 50 hours a week. Japanese husbands aren't much help either — they spend an average of one hour a day helping with the children and household chores, compared with three hours for husbands in the U.S. and Western Europe. "You end up being a housewife with no independent income," bank worker Eri Tomita told The Observer. "It's not an option for women like me."
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For years, Takeshi hid from the world, playing video games all night and sleeping all day, eating from a tray his mother left outside his room. He was a hikikomori, one of an estimated 1 million Japanese teens and young men who have become shut-ins, with virtually no human contact beyond their parents. Some of the hikikomori first withdraw because of some social embarrassment — bad grades, or a romantic rejection. The longer they drop out, the more shame they feel in a society where one's status and reputation are paramount and hard to change. Parents, and especially mothers, often enable the withdrawal. "In Japan, mothers and sons often have a symbiotic, codependent relationship," says psychiatrist Tamaki Saito, who first identified the disorder in the 1990s. Takeshi re-entered society after four years, thanks to a government program that sends female outreach counselors known as "rental sisters" to coax the hikikomori out of the house. But that program doesn't always work. As one shut-in of 15 years said, "I missed my chance."'
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Work 50+ hrs/week, pay all the bills, and...
"Child care is scarce and expensive, while Japan's brutal work culture often demands that employees work more than 50 hours a week. Japanese husbands aren't much help either — they spend an average of one hour a day helping with the children and household chores, compared with three hours for husbands in the U.S. and Western Europe."
In the same breath the article acknowledges the 'brutal work culture' of Japan that is indeed legendary, and then at the same time rips on dad for not being much help around the house.
Gee, sorry, was my busting a$$ for you and the kid(s) *you* wanted so badly to keep a roof over your heads and food in the fridge just plain not enough for you? Here's an idea: I stay home and you go work. Now when you get in at around 9:00 PM because heaven forbid you leave work anywhere near 5:00, start doing some housework. But yeah, you need to be at work the next day at 8:00 AM sharp or else your boss will ream you out over it at the next section meeting in front of everyone. Of course you'll need to be up by 5:00 AM to catch a train in so you'll be at your desk by 8:00-- sharp!
But I agree Japanese society needs to change. Women need to start working more in the labor force to pay their own way through life, and maybe stop pestering Japanese men about marriage. As the article aptly points out, it is not a very attractive deal for them, especially since the con'n the US handed to them after WWII wrote no-fault divorce into it as a right for Japanese women; naturally, nymphotropism being what it is, the courts have her also getting at least half her ex's retirement, savings, and of course, the house/apt. too, since she'll get the kids, if any.
Immigration? The Japanese start allowing non-Japanese to become citizens if they are not *fluent* in Japanese and legally change their last name to an "official" Japanese last name, like Tanaka, Wada, Okagaki, etc.? That's just a couple of the current req'ts for getting Japanese citizenship. Why so hard? Well, first thing, the Japanese are very cognizant of their identity as Japanese -- this includes heritage, culture, language, food, values, the whole bit. Non-Japanese are just not likely to be in on this whole thing, unless they were raised there and had at least one Japanese parent (and being born in Japan does not automatically make one a Japanese citizen). And another reason: half the pop'n of the US is crowded onto a living space about 70% the size of California. Japan is pretty much concrete and asphalt from one side of the main island to the other. Without massive daily imports of food and other raw materials and goods, Japan would be in real trouble. But they'd bear up well under it. Looting and rioting? Puhhleeze! That's not dignified, which is to say, it isn't Japanese. The rest of the world could take a lesson.
So no, immigration reform to allow loads of non-Japanese into Japan like the US did in the 1930s just is not in the cards, at least not until the pop'n drops precipitously. Given how little elbow room there is in Japan, really, is this such a bad thing?