The fertility crisis started in Japan, but it won't stay there
Skip to main content
  • Home
  • Economy
  • Stocks
  • Analysis
  • World+Biz
  • Sports
  • Features
  • Epaper
  • More
    • Subscribe
    • COVID-19
    • Bangladesh
    • Splash
    • Videos
    • Games
    • Long Read
    • Infograph
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Thoughts
    • Podcast
    • Quiz
    • Tech
    • Archive
    • Trial By Trivia
    • Magazine
    • Supplement
  • বাংলা
The Business Standard

Tuesday
June 28, 2022

Sign In
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Economy
  • Stocks
  • Analysis
  • World+Biz
  • Sports
  • Features
  • Epaper
  • More
    • Subscribe
    • COVID-19
    • Bangladesh
    • Splash
    • Videos
    • Games
    • Long Read
    • Infograph
    • Interviews
    • Offbeat
    • Thoughts
    • Podcast
    • Quiz
    • Tech
    • Archive
    • Trial By Trivia
    • Magazine
    • Supplement
  • বাংলা
TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2022
The fertility crisis started in Japan, but it won't stay there

Thoughts

Gearoid Reidy, Bloomberg
24 June, 2022, 01:15 pm
Last modified: 24 June, 2022, 01:15 pm

Related News

  • Tokyo June heatwave worst since 1875 as power supply creaks under strain
  • US, Japan, Australia, New Zealand and United Kingdom form Pacific group
  • Japan to provide necessary aid for Afghanistan after earthquake
  • US recession fears darken outlook for Japan, global factories
  • Japan cancels financing Matarbari coal project phase 2

The fertility crisis started in Japan, but it won't stay there

It is a variation on the Anna Karenina principle: All fertile societies are alike; each infertile society is infertile in its own way

Gearoid Reidy, Bloomberg
24 June, 2022, 01:15 pm
Last modified: 24 June, 2022, 01:15 pm
Gearoid Reidy. Sketch: TBS
Gearoid Reidy. Sketch: TBS

The world has an obsession with Japan's shrinking population. Each year, news that the country is a little bit smaller can reliably be called upon for column inches, which tend to examine it as a Japanese mystery — one of those inherently Oriental concepts that foreigners could not possibly penetrate, like wabi-sabi or the bushido code of samurai warriors. 

The New York Times asked in 2012, "Without babies, can Japan survive?" The Atlantic wrote about "the mystery of why Japanese people are having so few babies." To be fair, Japan talks about the population crisis as much as anyone, with one paper recently calling for the declaration of a "declining birth-rate state of emergency."

The proposal has echoes of the "climate emergency" legislation passed by governments such as the UK to heighten awareness of global warming. But Japan is to the fertility crisis what low-lying Pacific Islands are to the environmental crisis: just an early signal of the same problems that are coming for everywhere else. 

Japan first took serious notice of its declining births in 1989, in an event known as the "1.57 Shock" — the total fertility rate (TFR) that was recorded that year, less even than the 1.58 of 1966, when couples avoided having kids due to superstition over an inauspicious event in the Chinese Zodiac. 

Despite three decades of task forces, government support programs and ministers in charge of the issue, little has changed. While the decline in the birth rate has been arrested, Japan has been able to do almost nothing to significantly raise it. A record low of 1.26 was recorded in 2005, which has risen to 1.3 in 2021 — and while that has been impacted by the pandemic, it has not been above 1.5 in more than three decades.

Japan is often convinced that its economic malaise since the 1980s is the root of its ills, but that link seems less than clear. Births dropped all through the 1970s and 80s, with the "1.57 Shock" coming at the peak of its economic might. If anything, there seems to be an inverse relationship between wealth and fertility: Okinawa, the country's poorest region, consistently has the highest rate, with wealthy Tokyo the lowest. The experience of other countries also indicates differently, with rich Singapore at an even lower rate than Japan. Almost every country in Europe lies below the 2.1 level needed to maintain the population, with countries including Croatia, Portugal and Greece all set to lose similar levels to Japan over the next three decades.  

"Economic conditions are not so helpful in explaining persistent trends," explains Mikko Myrskyla, director of the Rostock, Germany-based Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research. "Scientists are somewhat helpless in explaining what then drives the long term change." 

It is a variation on the Anna Karenina principle: All fertile societies are alike; each infertile society is infertile in its own way. 

While Western media once tended to obsess over how little sex the Japanese might be having, the same phenomenon is now being observed across the globe. Are there other unique social conditions, perhaps? Seen through a western lens, some of Japan's problems might seem obvious: A notorious culture of overtime work or waiting lists for kindergartens. 

Yet many of these issues are no longer as chronic as they once were — and alleviating them has had little impact on fertility. Average overtime hours have halved in less than 10 years, according to one report. The number of kids on waiting lists for kindergartens has plunged, down nearly 80% in 2021 from 2017, even as the female labor participation rate has risen. 

What about Japan's low gender equality? If anything, women's increasing role outside the home in recent decades is one factor contributing to the decline, enabling women to delay marriage or not marry at all, according to one report. Nearby Taiwan touts itself as the most gender-equal society in Asia, but has a TFR rate of just 1.08 — the worst in the world, according to one estimate. 

"Japan may have its own idiosyncrasies, but given the very large number of countries with persistent low fertility, each reaching low fertility in its own way, it would be difficult to single out something specific," said Myrskyla. He points to European countries such as Italy, Germany, Finland and Hungary, where gender norms and public support for working mothers vary wildly, but the TFR is consistently low.

Myrskyla suggests "adaptation" is a likely better policy response than Japan's 30 years of trying to increase births — investing in education, keeping people in jobs for longer, and integrating women and immigrants to top up the workforce. In recent years, Japan's policy mix has also gradually come to focus not on changing people's minds about marriage or kids, but helping those who lack opportunities — holding events for rural communities to meet potential partners, or the recent addition to health insurance coverage of expensive IVF treatments. 

Perhaps the one thing that unites countries with low TFR is that they tend to be wealthy, even if wealthy countries do not necessarily have below-replacement levels. Although Japan frets about how rich it truly is, it is still a very wealthy nation in per-capita GDP terms. Many are surprised to learn that the US has a persistently low fertility rate of just 1.66. A Japanese saying describes a problem that is someone else's issue as a "fire on the other side of the river." When it comes to population, Japan's struggles are anything but. 


Gearoid Reidy is a Senior Editor at Bloomberg 


Disclaimer: This article first appeared on Bloomberg, and is published by special syndication arrangement 

Fertility hospital / birth / Japan

Comments

While most comments will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive, moderation decisions are subjective. Published comments are readers’ own views and The Business Standard does not endorse any of the readers’ comments.

Top Stories

  • The Padma Bridge will contribute to the GDP, create employment opportunities and generate economic activities in the southern part of Bangladesh. Photo: Mumit M
    Form commission to find who conspired against Padma Bridge: HC  
  • Photo: TBS
    Food concerns tell on clothing sales
  • World Bank to give Bangladesh $18b IDA loans in next five years
    World Bank to give Bangladesh $18b IDA loans in next five years

MOST VIEWED

  • Ashikur Rahman Tuhin. Sketch: TBS
    Bangladesh’s apparel industry growth is here to stay
  • Volodymyr Yermolenko. Sketch: TBS
    From Pushkin to Putin: Russian literature’s imperial ideology
  • Farida Akhter. Sketch: TBS
    Bt Cotton approval. Another alarming threat?
  • Sketch: TBS
    The UN knows Afghanistan is messed up. But it’s keeping mum
  • Sketch: TBS
    A legal and political analysis of World Bank’s Padma Bridge snub
  • Sketch: TBS
    Time for a macro policy change?

Related News

  • Tokyo June heatwave worst since 1875 as power supply creaks under strain
  • US, Japan, Australia, New Zealand and United Kingdom form Pacific group
  • Japan to provide necessary aid for Afghanistan after earthquake
  • US recession fears darken outlook for Japan, global factories
  • Japan cancels financing Matarbari coal project phase 2

Features

Abortion is a part of healthcare. Photo: Bloomberg

Abortion is healthcare and women’s rights are human rights

1h | Panorama
Prashanta Kumar Banerjee. Sketch: TBS

'Public Asset Management Company can be an additional tool to curb bad loans'

3h | Interviews
Aid boats navigate through the different waters of Jamalganj Upazila, giving aid to flood victims.  Photo: Masum Billah

Bandits, hunger and snakes: Flood victims pass sleepless nights

5h | Panorama
Redmi 10C- Best Budget smartphone with one (big) compromise

Redmi 10C- Best Budget smartphone with one (big) compromise

1d | Brands

More Videos from TBS

Ways to earn extra income in student life

Ways to earn extra income in student life

4h | Videos
The dormant south is ablaze with new possibilities

The dormant south is ablaze with new possibilities

18h | Videos
Russian missiles strike Kyiv

Russian missiles strike Kyiv

19h | Videos
Savings, excess liquidity in banks declining, loan demands increasing

Savings, excess liquidity in banks declining, loan demands increasing

21h | Videos

Most Read

1
Padma Bridge from satellite. Photo: Screengrab
Bangladesh

Padma Bridge from satellite 

2
Desco wanted to make a bold statement with their new head office building, a physical entity that would be a corporate icon. Photo: Courtesy
Habitat

Desco head office: When commitment to community and environment inspires architecture

3
Japan cancels financing Matarbari coal project phase 2
Bangladesh

Japan cancels financing Matarbari coal project phase 2

4
Photo: Courtesy
Corporates

Gree AC being used in all parts of Padma Bridge project

5
Photo: TBS
Infrastructure

Gains from Padma Bridge to cross $10b, hope experts

6
Photo: TBS
Bangladesh

Motorcycles banned on Padma Bridge 

EMAIL US
contact@tbsnews.net
FOLLOW US
WHATSAPP
+880 1847416158
The Business Standard
  • About Us
  • Contact us
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy
  • Comment Policy
Copyright © 2022
The Business Standard All rights reserved
Technical Partner: RSI Lab
BENEATH THE SURFACE
Workers unload boats and stockpile sacks of paddy at the BOC Ghat paddy market on the bank of the River Meghna in Brahmanbaria’s Ashuganj, the largest paddy market in the eastern part of the country. This century-old market sells paddies worth Tk5-6 crore a day during the peak season. PHOTO: RAJIB DHAR

Contact Us

The Business Standard

Main Office -4/A, Eskaton Garden, Dhaka- 1000

Phone: +8801847 416158 - 59

Send Opinion articles to - oped.tbs@gmail.com

For advertisement- sales@tbsnews.net