Japan sees pace of population drop ease
JAPAN’S population will fall nearly a third by 2065, with almost 40 percent aged 65 or older and the working population laboring under a tougher pension burden, although the pace of population decline has slowed slightly, a government agency said yesterday.
Solutions to Japan’s population slide have eluded policy makers for decades, putting finances under growing pressure as demand for pensions surges.
In 2015, the government set up a new ministry tasked with keeping the population from going below the demographic red line of 100 million by 2060.
A projection for 50 years, conducted once every five years by a branch of the Health Ministry, showed that the pace of population decline has slowed slightly from the last estimate in 2012, with the total set to fall below 100 million in 2053.
Earlier, the population was set to fall to below 100 million by 2048.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said the slower pace of population decline showed government policies were working.
“I am sure that the next five years will show even more of an impact,” Suga told a news conference.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has said the aging, shrinking population is not a burden but an incentive to boost productivity through innovations like robots, wireless sensors and artificial intelligence.
People aged 65 or older are set to make up 38.4 percent of the population in 2065, with those 14 and under at 10.2 percent.
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