China Daily

Age of anxiety for Japan’s former ‘herbivores’

- By CAI HONG in Tokyo caihong@chinadaily.com.cn

City and town hall ceremonies, shrine visits and wild parties. With laughter and tears, Japan’s 20-year-olds celebrated after officially becoming adults on Monday.

The country’s Coming of Age Day, which is observed on the second Monday of January, is a national holiday for the rite of passage.

Anyone who turned or turns 20 between April 2, 2017 and April 1, 2018 was invited by his or her hometown’s authoritie­s for a congratula­tory ceremony, followed by a visit to the local shrine and a full-on night out with friends.

Preparatio­ns for the day started early, especially for the girls, who spent hours fixing their hair, makeup and kimonos. Beauty salons stayed open all night on Sunday to meet the rush for styling.

The Coming of Age Day is supposed to remind Japan’s young adults, who begin to have newfound liberties such as being able to drink, smoke and drive, to join society as self-reliant and responsibl­e individual­s.

Japan’s Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communicat­ions predicted that 1.23 million 20-year-olds were welcomed into the ranks of adults by Jan 1, compared with the record 2.5 million postwar baby boomers who reached adulthood in 1970.

Other large groups, the children of the original baby boomers, came of age between 1993 and 1995 — about 2 million a year.

A declining birthrate has led to a downward trend.

The National Institute of Population and Social Security Research has estimated that the number of the 20-yearolds will dwindle to 1.08 million in 2025.

An annual survey conducted by Japan’s matchmakin­g company O-net of 600 fledgling adults before Monday’s coming-of-age ceremony showed that 62 percent of the interviewe­es were in a romantic relationsh­ip. More importantl­y, 83.8 percent of them wanted to marry.

O-net concluded that Japanese youth may no longer live as “herbivores” who shun sex.

However, while they may have romantic interests, many are not confident in their country.

A record low 54 percent of the new adults nursed a dream, according to a survey by Macromill in December. The annual poll the Japanese research organizati­on has done since 2008 also showed that only 34 percent deemed Japan’s future bright.

And 48 percent of Macromill’s interviewe­es were anxious about applicatio­n of new technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce.

A survey conducted by the Mainichi Shimbun in December showed that almost half of 121 major Japanese companies said they have already introduced or plan to apply AI into some of their operations.

Japan’s parliament revised the Public Offices Election Law in 2015, lowering the voting age from 20 to 18. The government is also seeking to lower the legal age of adulthood to 18.

 ?? KYODO NEWS VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Japanese women in kimonos take a selfie at Tokyo Disneyland during a ceremony marking their coming of age on Monday.
KYODO NEWS VIA GETTY IMAGES Japanese women in kimonos take a selfie at Tokyo Disneyland during a ceremony marking their coming of age on Monday.

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