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Japan
This Week in AsiaPolitics

Japan military hiring hit by low birth rate, pay as many reluctant to give up ‘good life’

  • Experts say the future looks bleak for the Self-Defence Forces battling scandals and competition from the private sector to recruit youngsters

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Japanese troops operate a howitzer during a live-fire exercise in Gotemba, central Japan, on May 26. Photo: AFP
Julian Ryall
Japan’s tumbling birth rate, better pay in the private sector and scandals have emerged as the military’s major stumbling block in attracting young recruits to plug a worsening manpower shortage.

The Self-Defence Forces managed to hire only 9,959 people in the financial year 2023, just over 50 per cent of their target and a record low for personnel joining the three branches of the armed forces.

The SDF’s optimum troop strength is around 247,000, but it is currently about 20,000 short of that figure across all arms of the military.

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“People realise that they are living a reasonably good and comfortable life and they are asking why they would swap that for the strict life and poor pay of the military,” Ryo Hinata-Yamaguchi, an assistant professor of international relations at the University of Tokyo, said.

A string of scandals has also put some young Japanese off signing up.

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On Tuesday, Rina Gonoi, who was sexually assaulted while serving in the Ground Self-Defence Force, reached a civil settlement with three of her former superiors.

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