Municipalities at Risk of Extinction
; Population Decline
; Low Fertility
; Japan
Publication Year
2024-12-31
Publisher
Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs
Citation
Global Social Security Review 2024 No.겨울 31, pp.101-113
Abstract
Japan’s policy efforts to prevent local depopulation date back to the 1960s, when, as migration to the capital region intensified, other parts of the country became increasingly under-inhabited. Later, with the emergence of ‘marginal villages,’ policy priorities shifted to instilling vitality into local communities, reanimating and renovating them, and helping them secure skilled human resources. Initially implemented by municipalities, these policies were later, following the publication of the “Masuda Report” in 2014, taken over by the national government. In this article, I trace the origins of Japan’s policies on local population decline and examine the current state of these policies, with a particular focus on the policy of dispatching human resources to local areas.