Welcome to Incels.is - Involuntary Celibate Forum

Welcome! This is a forum for involuntary celibates: people who lack a significant other. Are you lonely and wish you had someone in your life? You're not alone! Join our forum and talk to people just like you.

It's Over Meanwhile in Japan...

G

Ghost

Major
★★★
Joined
May 2, 2018
Posts
2,231
Online time
10h 18m


Japan’s population continues to plummet with no end in sight.
The most recent government statistics show fertility rates hitting record lows — again. While it can be argued that Japan should be a smaller nation and managing that decline would in some ways augment the nation’s status and standing in the world, the current trajectory does not make that case.

Japan must address its shrinking population. Perhaps the immediacy of the problem will make its solution more urgent. The record to date does not offer grounds for hope.

According to the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare, Japan’s total fertility rate — the average number of births per woman during her productive years — dropped to 1.14 in 2025, down 0.01 points from last year. That is the 10th consecutive year of decline and a record low. Forty years ago, Japan’s fertility rate was 1.76, a considerably larger number than that today, but still well below that needed to keep the population steady.

Overall, the number of babies born by native Japanese within Japan — foreign nationals are excluded from the tally — fell to 671,236, a decline of 2.2% from 2024, another record low since record keeping began in 1899.

As a result of this decline, Japan’s natural population fell by 918,253, the second year in a row that there have been 900,000 more deaths than births. The natural population has now declined for 19 consecutive years.

Overall, Japan’s population is 123.05 million, according to preliminary data from the 2025 national census released last week. This is a decline of 3.09 million from the previous survey conducted five years ago and marks the third consecutive decrease. More striking, the 2.5% fall is the worst on record, more than tripling the 0.7% drop recorded in the last census in 2020.

Expect this slide to continue. According to figures released by the Internal Affairs Ministry last month, the estimated population of children under the age of 15 in Japan was 13.29 million as of April 1, the 45th consecutive year of decline and the lowest level since 1950. The share of children in Japan’s total population fell 0.3 percentage points to 10.8%, the 52nd consecutive year of decline and another record low.

Troubling though these statistics are, there are glimmers of hope. While the fertility rate continues to fall, it is less steep than it was. During the COVID-19 pandemic, it fell more than 5% a year for three years; the current rate is less than half that. In addition, the number of marriages is increasing. Just over 489,000 couples were married last year, up 0.8% from the previous year and the second straight annual increase.

While the average age of women having their first child remained at 31 for the third straight year, the number of births among women aged 30 to 34 rose by 2,221. This could reflect a growing number of women marrying later and becoming mothers. Tokyo, which has the lowest total fertility rate in Japan, recorded an increase in the number of births for the first time in a decade.

And the number of deaths in 2025 fell for the first time in five years. While that, in combination with a falling birth rate, exacerbates the country’s demographic squeeze, longer lives should be celebrated.

A managed population decline would be celebrated as well. Successfully shrinking the size of the nation could reduce resource demands and put the nation at the forefront of a social and economic evolution that could help determine global leadership as other countries address the same problem. Japan is merely the first to navigate a phenomenon that South Korea and China will face, along with other developed nations in Europe.

The problem is that Japan isn’t handling it especially well. Demographers anticipated this trajectory over 50 years ago yet the country did nothing about it. It is critical to recognize that this is not just a problem for politicians. The causes of the shrinking fertility rate and the declining population are rooted in a host of practices and policies found throughout society.

Reduced economic opportunities affect expectations about the ability to support a family; if the future looks grim, young people won’t marry and won’t have children. But providing those opportunities will not offset the reluctance of women to have children when doing so limits their future choices. Motherhood is an exceptional calling and should be encouraged, but women must have options if they choose to have children.

Last month, Forum for the Future We Choose, a public-private sector advisory panel with representatives that span social, political and economic interests, highlighted in a report how social norms in general, and unconscious gender bias in particular, impact Japan’s low birth rate.

The evidence — the country’s demographic trajectory — makes plain that they do not wish to circumscribe their lives and exist solely as mothers, wives or household managers. Some do, but many, seemingly most, do not. Over a decade ago, our predecessors on the Japan Times editorial board noted this simple fact. The problem lingers. Plainly, more work must be done.

Child care and education expenditures can and must increase. Identifying the source of those funds has been challenging and is becoming even more difficult in these turbulent times as other priorities compete for increasingly scarce yen. This is not just a question of government policy, however.

More important are expectations about appropriate roles around the house. The Forum for the Future We Choose report spotlighted the different thinking among men and women when it comes to the norms guiding family behavior. Simply put, they want burden-sharing among all adults in the household. Far more women than men believe that such thinking is significant, an indication of the unseen burdens that women bear.

Governments may help facilitate changes in thinking but private actors can do more, more quickly and more effectively. At the most basic level, a woman’s career prospects should not be penalized if she has children. She should not be forced to choose between having a career or a family — and certainly, she should not, as is still the case in some situations, be forced to give up her career after marriage.

Businesses do not have to wait for governments to set quotas or goals for women’s representation in senior positions. Nor should they have to be told to create environments that are welcoming of married women — or all women for that matter. They must not be relegated to supporting roles.

Demographers have warned about this problem for decades. Japan’s leaders have acknowledged their concern and the numbers show that the work is well founded. Yet the nation’s trajectory continues unabated. Even the immediacy of Japan’s population decline has not imparted urgency to its solution. It is a failing of the entire society and one that looks certain to continue.
 
They don't want to fuck their own men.
 
One of my older colleagues is married to a japanese woman (spoiler: he's not japanese)
 
Japan is dead
 
kek just shut it down already :feelshaha:
 
Let me help.them
 
Asian women would rather die off than reproduce with short ricemen
 
These niggas are going to keep victimizing foids even as they are going extinct. Don't be fooled. This is an insincere and political article just for clicks.
More important are expectations about appropriate roles around the house. The Forum for the Future We Choose report spotlighted the different thinking among men and women when it comes to the norms guiding family behavior. Simply put, they want burden-sharing among all adults in the household. Far more women than men believe that such thinking is significant, an indication of the unseen burdens that women bear.
What burden-sharing you retard? Who has to bust his ass non-stop for life to provide for his family?
Governments may help facilitate changes in thinking but private actors can do more, more quickly and more effectively. At the most basic level, a woman’s career prospects should not be penalized if she has children. She should not be forced to choose between having a career or a family — and certainly, she should not, as is still the case in some situations, be forced to give up her career after marriage.
Like this isn't what has led to falling birth rates all over the world.
Businesses do not have to wait for governments to set quotas or goals for women’s representation in senior positions. Nor should they have to be told to create environments that are welcoming of married women — or all women for that matter. They must not be relegated to supporting roles.
Of course, reroute it all back to making it all about foids.

Male politicians (of every nation) are the biggest cucks in the world, for letting these MSM-tards get away with saying and publishing shits like this, especially when their existence is under threat.
 


Japan’s population continues to plummet with no end in sight.
The most recent government statistics show fertility rates hitting record lows — again. While it can be argued that Japan should be a smaller nation and managing that decline would in some ways augment the nation’s status and standing in the world, the current trajectory does not make that case.

Japan must address its shrinking population. Perhaps the immediacy of the problem will make its solution more urgent. The record to date does not offer grounds for hope.

According to the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare, Japan’s total fertility rate — the average number of births per woman during her productive years — dropped to 1.14 in 2025, down 0.01 points from last year. That is the 10th consecutive year of decline and a record low. Forty years ago, Japan’s fertility rate was 1.76, a considerably larger number than that today, but still well below that needed to keep the population steady.

Overall, the number of babies born by native Japanese within Japan — foreign nationals are excluded from the tally — fell to 671,236, a decline of 2.2% from 2024, another record low since record keeping began in 1899.

As a result of this decline, Japan’s natural population fell by 918,253, the second year in a row that there have been 900,000 more deaths than births. The natural population has now declined for 19 consecutive years.

Overall, Japan’s population is 123.05 million, according to preliminary data from the 2025 national census released last week. This is a decline of 3.09 million from the previous survey conducted five years ago and marks the third consecutive decrease. More striking, the 2.5% fall is the worst on record, more than tripling the 0.7% drop recorded in the last census in 2020.

Expect this slide to continue. According to figures released by the Internal Affairs Ministry last month, the estimated population of children under the age of 15 in Japan was 13.29 million as of April 1, the 45th consecutive year of decline and the lowest level since 1950. The share of children in Japan’s total population fell 0.3 percentage points to 10.8%, the 52nd consecutive year of decline and another record low.

Troubling though these statistics are, there are glimmers of hope. While the fertility rate continues to fall, it is less steep than it was. During the COVID-19 pandemic, it fell more than 5% a year for three years; the current rate is less than half that. In addition, the number of marriages is increasing. Just over 489,000 couples were married last year, up 0.8% from the previous year and the second straight annual increase.

While the average age of women having their first child remained at 31 for the third straight year, the number of births among women aged 30 to 34 rose by 2,221. This could reflect a growing number of women marrying later and becoming mothers. Tokyo, which has the lowest total fertility rate in Japan, recorded an increase in the number of births for the first time in a decade.

And the number of deaths in 2025 fell for the first time in five years. While that, in combination with a falling birth rate, exacerbates the country’s demographic squeeze, longer lives should be celebrated.

A managed population decline would be celebrated as well. Successfully shrinking the size of the nation could reduce resource demands and put the nation at the forefront of a social and economic evolution that could help determine global leadership as other countries address the same problem. Japan is merely the first to navigate a phenomenon that South Korea and China will face, along with other developed nations in Europe.

The problem is that Japan isn’t handling it especially well. Demographers anticipated this trajectory over 50 years ago yet the country did nothing about it. It is critical to recognize that this is not just a problem for politicians. The causes of the shrinking fertility rate and the declining population are rooted in a host of practices and policies found throughout society.

Reduced economic opportunities affect expectations about the ability to support a family; if the future looks grim, young people won’t marry and won’t have children. But providing those opportunities will not offset the reluctance of women to have children when doing so limits their future choices. Motherhood is an exceptional calling and should be encouraged, but women must have options if they choose to have children.

Last month, Forum for the Future We Choose, a public-private sector advisory panel with representatives that span social, political and economic interests, highlighted in a report how social norms in general, and unconscious gender bias in particular, impact Japan’s low birth rate.

The evidence — the country’s demographic trajectory — makes plain that they do not wish to circumscribe their lives and exist solely as mothers, wives or household managers. Some do, but many, seemingly most, do not. Over a decade ago, our predecessors on the Japan Times editorial board noted this simple fact. The problem lingers. Plainly, more work must be done.

Child care and education expenditures can and must increase. Identifying the source of those funds has been challenging and is becoming even more difficult in these turbulent times as other priorities compete for increasingly scarce yen. This is not just a question of government policy, however.

More important are expectations about appropriate roles around the house. The Forum for the Future We Choose report spotlighted the different thinking among men and women when it comes to the norms guiding family behavior. Simply put, they want burden-sharing among all adults in the household. Far more women than men believe that such thinking is significant, an indication of the unseen burdens that women bear.

Governments may help facilitate changes in thinking but private actors can do more, more quickly and more effectively. At the most basic level, a woman’s career prospects should not be penalized if she has children. She should not be forced to choose between having a career or a family — and certainly, she should not, as is still the case in some situations, be forced to give up her career after marriage.

Businesses do not have to wait for governments to set quotas or goals for women’s representation in senior positions. Nor should they have to be told to create environments that are welcoming of married women — or all women for that matter. They must not be relegated to supporting roles.

Demographers have warned about this problem for decades. Japan’s leaders have acknowledged their concern and the numbers show that the work is well founded. Yet the nation’s trajectory continues unabated. Even the immediacy of Japan’s population decline has not imparted urgency to its solution. It is a failing of the entire society and one that looks certain to continue.
noodlewhores would rather destroy their nation than fuck their own men :feelsbadman:
 
Let me help.them
the way you typed this message just makes me so sad, its phrased as if its the last thing you say before dying, "let... mee......... help them."
 
Nobody will do anything about it. Because for liberals foids' rights and emancipation are worth all the sacrifice.
 
the way you typed this message just makes me so sad, its phrased as if its the last thing you say before dying, "let... mee......... help them."
Yes. Good. Eye
 
iu
 
These niggas are going to keep victimizing foids even as they are going extinct. Don't be fooled. This is an insincere and political article just for clicks.

What burden-sharing you retard? Who has to bust his ass non-stop for life to provide for his family?

Like this isn't what has led to falling birth rates all over the world.

Of course, reroute it all back to making it all about foids.

Male politicians (of every nation) are the biggest cucks in the world, for letting these MSM-tards get away with saying and publishing shits like this, especially when their existence is under threat.
 
All this brabble because woman wont open her legs and cant stay responsible :feelsclown:
 
I started skim reading and aggressively when they beat around the bush. Japanese women are women of an affluent country with telecommunications technology. Chad o chin chin only. Japanese Chad is obliterating manko to make Japanese roasties. And the sallary man's son has seen how his wife treated his dad. Grass eating is real.

It would be cool to have some guy from Japan tell us his experience in English. Big language barrier.

especially when their existence is under threat.
They don't care. They won't even care in the nursing home. They'll die with their preconceptions intact. They never cared. It will be up to blackpilled Millennials and Zoomers to try undo the damage with legislation. But it's probably over.

It's a bleak future all around. Japan seems to fall first.
 
I feel like japanese woman hate their own kind and want to marry white chad , women are really dumb fuck whores.
 

Similar threads

earming
Replies
17
Views
1K
cathuluelitist
cathuluelitist
GmeOvr
Replies
2
Views
338
nihilum
nihilum
I_like_pizza
Replies
11
Views
771
Misogynist Vegeta
Misogynist Vegeta
Ubermenschvirtues
Replies
6
Views
470
ColderManTruce
ColderManTruce
IdkWhyLive
Replies
18
Views
739
IdkWhyLive
IdkWhyLive

Users who are viewing this thread

shape1
shape2
shape3
shape4
shape5
shape6
Back
Top