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Swordmaker
QUOTE
Workers urged: Go home and multiply

Even before one reaches the front door of Canon's headquarters in Tokyo, one can sense the virtual stampede of employees pouring out of the building exactly at 5:30 p.m.



Japan's birth rate of 1.34 is below the level needed to maintain the country's population.

In a country where 12-hour workdays are common, the electronics giant has taken to letting its employees leave early twice a week for a rather unusual reason: to encourage them to have more babies.

Japan is in the midst of an unprecedented recession, so corporations are being asked to work toward fixing another major problem: the country's low birthrate. Tell us what you think

At 1.34, the birthrate is well below the 2.0 needed to maintain Japan's population, according to the country's Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare.

Keidanren, Japan's largest business group, with 1,300 major international corporations as members, has issued a plea to its members to let workers go home early to spend time with their families and help Japan with its pressing social problem. Watch more on this story Video

One reason for the low birth rate is the 12-hour workday. But there are several other factors compounding the problem -- among them, the high cost of living, and social rigidity toward women and parenting.

In addition, Japan's population is aging at a faster pace than any other country in the world.

Analysts say the world's second-largest economy faces its greatest threat from its own social problems, rather than outside forces. And the country desperately needs to make some fixes to its current social and work structures, sociologists say.

The 5:30 p.m. lights-out program is one simple step toward helping address the population problem. It also has an added benefit: Amid the global economic downturn the company can slash overtime across the board twice a week.

"It's great that we can go home early and not feel ashamed," said employee Miwa Iwasaki.

(CNN: Workers urged - Go home and multiply)
yhellothar
lol why the fu-k do they have a WM/AF couple, they are trying to push that $hit even in foreign countries.
Federico
-Start playing Marvin Gaye on the radio 24/7.
Takashi
QUOTE(yhellothar @ Feb 22 2009, 07:29 PM) [snapback]4139064[/snapback]
lol why the fu-k do they have a WM/AF couple, they are trying to push that $hit even in foreign countries.

Because it's CNN and Tokyo is hardly short on foreigners.
Swordmaker
The conservative journalist and columnist Mark Steyn commented on this issue in the Wall Street Journal:

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As fertility shrivels, societies get older–and Japan and much of Europe are set to get older than any functioning societies have ever been.
...
Japan faces the same problem: Its population is already in absolute decline, the first gentle slope of a death spiral it will be unlikely ever to climb out of. Will Japan be an economic powerhouse if it's populated by Koreans and Filipinos? Very possibly. Will Germany if it's populated by Algerians? That's a trickier proposition.

It's the Demography, Stupid
Aixer
QUOTE
In addition, Japan's population is aging at a faster pace than any other country in the world.


Um... can some one tell me how this works? What does the article refer to when it says Japan's population ages at a faster rate. As far as I can tell, one year in America = 1 year in China = 1 year in France = 1 year in Japan.
wonda51

I think it is a just propaganda
there are still so many unemployed person etc.







Swordmaker
QUOTE(Aixer @ Feb 24 2009, 08:07 PM) [snapback]4141985[/snapback]
Um... can some one tell me how this works? What does the article refer to when it says Japan's population ages at a faster rate. As far as I can tell, one year in America = 1 year in China = 1 year in France = 1 year in Japan.

He was referring to the average age of the population. Low birth rate + long life expectancy = many old people. What about some maps and more in-depth information, so you can get the idea of that?

World map of birth rates based on United Nations Population Division's quinquennial estimates and projections. Shows estimated births per 1000 population for the years 2005-2010:



Map of countries and territories by fertility rate (the expected number of children born per woman in her child-bearing years):



The world literacy for comparison:



Demographer Emmanuel Todd investigated the different types of families worldwide and how there are matching beliefs, ideologies and political systems, and the historical events involving these things. He looked at demographic data in search of long-term trends and has always cast his net wide. In 1976 he published La Chute finale (The Final Fall), one of the few books to predict the near-term demise of the Soviet Union, which he deduced from it's falling birth rate and other demographic statistics. Literacy rose greatly from 1980 to 2000 pretty much everywhere. Not every country could match Tajikistan's 99 percent literacy rate, but even Niger, which started out with 8 percent, doubled to 16 during those two decades.

"…if one refuses to fall into simplistic economic schemas, whether of the left or the right, Marxist or neoconservative, there exists an immense amount of statistical information that allows one to take stock of an enormous cultural advancement going on in the world at the present time. Increases in general literacy and the spread of lower birth rates are the two fundamental changes shaping this cultural progress."

Examining this data, Todd predicts total literacy around the year 2030, and zero-population-growth birth rates around 2050. When literacy grows, birth rates drop, traditional methods of organizing society are questioned, and a certain amount of turmoil results.

"Progress is not, as Enlightenment thinkers may have believed, a pleasurable linear ascent on all fronts. Being uprooted from one's traditional life - from the well-trodden routines of illiteracy, pregnancy, poverty, sickness, and death - can at first produce as much suffering and disorientation as it does hope and opportunity. Very often, perhaps in a majority of cases, the transformation of cultural and personal horizons is experienced as a social and individual crisis. Destabilized peoples behave violently both among themselves and toward others. The move into modernity is frequently accompanied by an explosion of ideological violence."
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