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Japan
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Japan’s population drops most in 9 years, number of over-65s hits record high

  • All 47 Japanese prefectures except Okinawa saw their population fall, with Tokyo and its surrounds having fewer people for the first time since 2013
  • People aged 65 or older now account for a record 29 per cent of the country’s entire population. Resident foreigners fell 107,202 to 2.7 million

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Elderly women walk through a traditional alley in Kyoto. People aged 65 or older now account for a record 29 per cent of the entire Japanese population. Photo: LightRocket via Getty Images
Kyodo
Japan’s population declined to slightly less than 126 million this year, its biggest drop since 2013, as deaths again outnumbered births and Covid-19 border restrictions kept foreign resident numbers low, according to government data.

The country’s population came to 125.9 million as of January 1, including resident foreigners, down 726,342 – or 0.57 per cent – from the previous year, according to data released by the internal affairs ministry on Tuesday.

All of Japan’s 47 prefectures except Okinawa saw their population fall, with Tokyo and the three surrounding prefectures of Saitama, Chiba, and Kanagawa having fewer people for the first time since 2013 as the coronavirus pandemic caused the traditional influx of people to the capital region to slow.

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The number of Japanese in Japan decreased by 619,140 to 123.2 million for the 13th straight year of decline, with deaths at an all-time high of around 1.44 million and births at a record low of around 810,000.

Resident foreigners fell 107,202 to 2.7 million, marking a drop for the second consecutive year due to tighter border controls amid the pandemic.

By prefecture, Tokyo saw the largest decrease at 48,592 people, the first drop since 2013 as the capital experienced significant outflow of foreign residents in addition to the decrease in Japanese moving in.

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