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Japan tops list of countries with shrinking population projection

5 Comments
By Preston Phro, RocketNews24

The Japanese population has taken a turn for the older…and the smaller. In fact, it has even topped a list of five countries facing “extinction” according to Sputnik Japan. The statistics have got a lot of people talking online.

The Sputnik article references a study by the Population Reference Bureau (PRB) which lists five countries that are expected to see massive decreases in population over the next 35 years. According to the article, Japan’s population is projected to decrease by 25% from its current population of 126,981,000 to 95,152,000. The PRB also predicts that the portion of the population aged 65 or older will also make up a full 23% of the entire population.

This isn’t exactly new news – there’s a real sense of crisis among some Japanese people and institutions about the declining/aging population. Take, for example, the report (at left) published by the Ministry of Finance, which covers such concerns as growing social security costs and economic slowdown…with bunnies.

It is, certainly, a serious matter for Japan, but it’s not the only country facing the problem. Also on the list was Ukraine, which is expected to see a 23% population reduction by 2050, though a large part of that is probably due to the loss of Crimea to Russia. Bosnia and Herzegovina also made the list and is expected to see a 19.6% decrease by 2050. Finally, Bulgaria is predicted to see a decrease of 18.2% and Georgia is expected to see a decrease of 17.2%.

Of course, finding out that their country had topped the list for the fastest shrinking got Japanese Internet commenters talking. Here are some of their thoughts.

“I think the population decline is less of a problem than the aging population…” “All of the patriots who love their country so much must certainly be out there making babies and multiplying all day long! Even so, you need to spread your patriotism more! (´・∀・`)” “All I can really say about this is, ‘Sorry.'” “Are the Japanese people an endangered species?!” “If you think about how we’re supposed to be a nation that loves the sakura (cherry trees), it kind of seems natural that we’d eventually disappear. Or maybe I should say, we’ve done a great job of not disappearing yet!” “Not matter how high stock prices rise or how the economy moves, as long as we’re a society that doesn’t produce babies, we have no future. That’s obvious. Wake up, people!” “Right before Nintendo hardware starts to go extinct!”

Hm, maybe that news that Nintendo is going to make mobile phone games was more prophetic than we realized.

Sources: Sputnik, Hachima Kiko

Read more stories from RocketNews24. -- Online “Population Decrease Map” of Japan paints a bleak, womanless future for the country -- “Why bother?” Survey says one in three Japanese young adults doesn’t see the point in effort -- Six things Tokyo has less of than any other city in Japan

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5 Comments
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The Japanese really and truly would prefer to die poor and alone in a tiny cold apartment rather than change. Changing would require confrontation and accepting responsibility and taking risks...three things modern Japanese are utterly incapable of doing.

-1 ( +5 / -6 )

I think the citizens of all those countries, including Japan, should get together and make lots of beautiful babies!

-4 ( +0 / -4 )

I look forward to a lower population so traveling during national holidays when the whole country is on holiday will be easier.

4 ( +4 / -0 )

I do not understand the concept of a small population here, the people mess the whole issue here .the large population of elderly people will need a huge amount of money for their welfare, the infrastructure would need maintenance, the Japanese government is already under the huge debt, the economy and the business already facing the shortage of experts and labour, Japan have serious issues with the neighbours and they will need resources and force for security and defence.

would the small work force/the youth be able to cope with all these issues?

0 ( +0 / -0 )

"The PRB also predicts that the portion of the population aged 65 or older will also make up a full 23% of the entire population."

It already is 25% of the population! By 2060 it is predicted to be 39%!

0 ( +0 / -0 )

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