2026年2月15日日曜日

HALF OF 20 MAJOR JAPANESE CITIES FACE SHRINKING POPULATION - TOKYO JAPAN

HALF OF 20 MAJOR JAPANESE CITIES FACE SHRINKING POPULATION - TOKYO JAPAN

@Jr_Paku Midin Channel


Half of 20 large Japanese cities, each with at least over 700,000 residents, have experienced a population decline compared to 10 years ago, partly due to a falling birthrate, analysis by Kyodo News showed Sunday.


An estimate for 2050 shows that the number of those cities that will see a population decline will expand to 18, despite their earlier success in having attracted young people from nearby areas.


Kitakyushu, located in the southwest of the country, marked the steepest decline among the ordinance-designated cities, which are vested with authority similar to that of prefectures in terms of social welfare and public health, among others. The city's population declined by 6.5 percent, from 970,000 to 910,000.


The shrinking population is prompting policymakers to review the designated cities system, which was based on the assumption of population growth.


Launched in 1956, the system was based on a certain level of population growth. Yokohama, Nagoya, Kyoto, Osaka, and Kobe were the first cities to be designated that year.


Shizuoka and six others have joined the group, after the government lowered its minimum requirement for designated cities from a population of 1 million to 700,000.


Comparing the basic residence register data of 2015 and 2025 as of Jan. 1, Kitakyushu was followed by Shizuoka, which saw a 6.0 percent drop from 710,000 to 670,000.


Data analysis showed that in contrast, Fukuoka marked the steepest population rise of 8.2 percent to 1.60 million, followed by Saitama with an increase of 7.1 percent to 1.35 million, and Kawasaki, up 6.2 percent to 1.53 million.


According to the 2025 data and the National Institute of Population and Social Security Research's 2050 estimates, Fukuoka and Kawasaki are the only two designated cities whose populations will not shrink by 2050.


Critics have pointed out that the designated cities have not been allocated enough financial resources in relation to their cumbersome duties, prompting some cross-party Diet members to push for the idea of turning them into "special cities" independent from prefectural governments.


As for the 62 core cities with a population of at least 200,000, 52, or about 84 percent, face a shrinking population compared to a decade ago, the analysis showed.

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HALF OF 20 MAJOR JAPANESE CITIES FACE SHRINKING POPULATION - TOKYO JAPAN

HALF OF 20 MAJOR JAPANESE CITIES FACE SHRINKING POPULATION - TOKYO JAPAN @Jr_Paku Midin Channel TOKYO Half of 20 large Japanese cities, each...