Hundreds of Japanese towns at ‘risk of disappearing’ due to plunge in women of child-bearing age: study
More than 40 per cent of Japanese municipalities are likely to see the number of their young female residents drop by more than half in the 30 years through 2050 as the country’s population rapidly declines, a study by private-sector experts’ panel showed on Wednesday.
The panel on population strategy warned that 744 municipalities were deemed at “risk of disappearing” due to the likely sharp fall in the number of women in their 20s to 30s, regarded as the core generation responsible for bearing children.
The localities considered in danger are those where the local governments would struggle to operate due to a population decline.
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The latest projection marks an improvement from a similar study released in 2014 by the Japan Policy Council, which estimated that 896 municipalities, or 49.8 per cent of the overall number, would see their young female populations decline in 2040 by more than half from levels in 2010.