The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Japan needs a movement to support marriage among young people

- IKUKO HIGUCHI Higuchi is a staff writer in the Lifestyle News Department of The Yomiuri Shimbun.

Agovernmen­t panel of experts made headlines in July by calling Japan’s declining number of births a “quiet emergency.” Last year, births hit another record low at 810,000, marking a 60% drop from approximat­ely 2 million in the early 1970s. e total fertility rate has been below 2.00 — the minimum level necessary to maintain the population — for nearly half a century, reaching 1.30 last year.

If the number of births continues to decline at this rate, Japan will theoretica­lly cease to exist, even without being subjected to any military force. It is truly an “emergency” situation.

Meanwhile, the results of the 2020 census showed shockingly high percentage­s of people who had never been married by the age of 50 — about 28% for men and 18% for women.

With declining births in mind, the increase in the number of unmarried people is a major problem. is is because most children are born to married couples. Children born out of wedlock account for only about 2% of all births in Japan. Many experts have started to point to the social phenomenon of the increasing number of unmarried people as the true cause of declining births in recent years.

Central and local government­s so far have focused their e orts in their ght against the low birthrate on supporting couples who are trying to have children.

ey have increased the number of day care centers, made medical care for infants free of charge, and introduced free early childhood education and tuition-free high school education programs. e burden of having children on young couples must be much less than before. While these are of course important policies, they are not e ective for increasing marriages.

Kanako Amano, a senior researcher at the NLI Research Institute, says what we need now is “to create a social environmen­t in which men and women who wish to marry can meet their partners and get married while still in their 20s.”

As an expert in Japan demographi­cs and the declining birthrate, she has analyzed data on marriage and childbeari­ng and has interviewe­d many young people. Looking into the age distributi­on of those who registered their rst marriage in 2020, Amano said the most common age was 27 for men and 26 for women, while the average age was 31 for men and 29 for women.

“People in their 20s tend to think that there is no need to rush into marriage, and that study or work is more important. But the data tell us it becomes very di cult for both men and women to nd a marriage partner of their liking once they hit 30,” she said. e existence of a biological time limit for having children, especially for women, is well-known. Amano says we should also be aware of the time limit for getting married.

But even with awareness of a time limit, the Japanese labor market and employment practices seem to prevent young people from nding partners and getting married.

It is common for Japanese companies to hire young university graduates with no work experience and give them onthe-job-training until they acquire the necessary skills. As a result, young employees in their 20s tend to be regarded as apprentice­s in their workplaces and are required to work overtime and sometimes even on weekends. Naturally, this leaves scant time for a private life.

In addition, Amano points to the maldistrib­ution of the young male and female population­s as a problem. More women than men move from regional areas to Tokyo when they start working. us, there are more men than women of prime marriageab­le age in regional areas and more such women than men in Tokyo, making it di cult for couples to form.

While the number of women with university degrees is increasing, small and midsize companies, which are often located in regional areas, have not yet fully embraced women as human resources. Even if women want to return to their hometowns, the lack of jobs where they can make use of their expertise and develop their careers means many of them end up working in Tokyo.

ere are also nancial factors. Because

Japan’s real wages per capita have not risen for the past three decades, more and more young students, unable to rely on their parents, have taken out loans to go to university. As a result, many enter the workforce with heavy debts and are unable to bear the nancial burdens of getting married and starting a family.

What can the central and local government­s do about declining births?

According to the report on the government’s measures to cope with the low birthrate compiled by the expert panel mentioned at the beginning of this article, 70% of prefecture­s o er matchmakin­g services to solve the marriage di culties.

I do not say such programs are meaningles­s, but they are not enough.

What we need to do now is simple, but hard to realize in the short term: We should increase the wage levels for young people, reduce overtime work by changing work practices and improving work e ciency, promote the empowermen­t of women — especially in regional areas — and provide more academic nancial aid that does not require repayment. ese things must be achieved through legislatio­n, subsidies, tax incentives and other measures for small and midsize enterprise­s as well as big companies.

My daughter, a third-year junior high school student, recently learned about Japan’s declining births and fast-aging society in class. She said she was sad to imagine a future with fewer and fewer young people. How can we adults explain to her younger generation how we got into this situation?

e decline in births is a quiet emergency because it will get worse before we know it. It will take another 20 years or so for the measures against it to produce e ects. All of society must awaken to a sense of crisis right away and develop momentum to prevent Japan’s downfall. (Sept. 10)

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