Can
Japan Rise Again?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: It's
Their War, Not Ours
We can thank
Providence that the earthquake was not 150 miles closer to Tokyo,
else Japan's dead might number in the millions.
Prime Minister
Naoto Kan calls it the worst crisis since World War II. Yet, horrendous
as it is, it does not, thus far, compare with that. For the earthquake
dead are not 1 percent of those who perished in World War II.
Between 1942
and 1945, Japan was stripped naked of an empire that embraced Formosa,
Korea, Manchuria, the entire China coast, all of French Indochina
(Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia), Thailand, Burma, Malaysia, Singapore,
the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia), the Philippines and the Western
Pacific out to Guam and south to Guadalcanal.
She sustained
2 million military dead and 500,000 to a million civilian dead under
U.S. carpet-bombing that reduced her great cities to smoldering
rubble and Hiroshima and Nagasaki to atomic ash.
Yet, 25 years
after the most devastating defeat in modern history, Japan boasted
the second largest and most dynamic economy on earth.
Under the proconsulship
of Gen. MacArthur, Japan rose to her feet, renounced war and reached
an annual growth rate of 10 percent by the 1960s, 5 percent in the
1970s, 4 percent in the 1980s. Smaller than Montana and with fewer
resources, she created an economy half as large as the U.S. and
in many ways technologically superior.
An extraordinary
accomplishment of an extraordinary people.
At the end
of the 1980s, Japan seemed poised to surpass America.
It did not
happen. The last two decades were lost decades, with Japan's economy
shrinking to a third of that of the United States. Last year, Japan
was overtaken as the world's second largest economy by China. Beijing
now produces more automobiles and has a trade surplus with America
that dwarfs that of Japan.
In 1988, eight
of the 10 largest companies in the world were Japanese. Today, Japan
does not have one company in the top 20 and only six in the top
100. Her national debt is 200 percent of gross domestic product.
Can Japan come
back from this earthquake and 20 years of economic stagnation and
political malaise to recover the dynamism she exhibited in the decades
after World War II?
To do so will
require a far greater miracle. The reason for such pessimism may
be summed up in a single word: demography.
Japan has 127
million people, her highest population ever. Yet, the United Nations
projects that 25 million Japanese will vanish by 2050. Why? Japan
is the oldest country on earth, with a median age of 45 and a fertility
rate below zero population growth for 40 years.
To sustain
a population, the fertility rate of its women must be 2.1 children.
Japan's rate, 1.27 children per woman, is not two-thirds of what
is required to replace her present population.
In 1960, when
Japan was striding to overtake West Germany as the No. 2 economy,
49 percent of her people were under 25 years of age. Less than 8
percent was over 60.
Today, only
23 percent of Japan's population is under 25, more than 30 percent
of all Japanese are over 60, and Japan's median age has shot up
to 45. Japan is projected to lose 3 million people this decade,
and nearly 6 million in the 2020s.
To put it starkly,
Japan is aging, shrinking and dying.
In 2050, less
than 19 percent of all Japanese will be under 25, while 44 percent
will be over 60. The median age will reach 55, and this assumes
a U.N.-projected rise in the fertility rate that is nowhere in sight.
Writing on
the decline in Japanese students in U.S. universities, The Washington
Post reports: "The number of children (in Japan) under the age of
15 has fallen for 28 consecutive years. The size of the nation's
high school graduating class has shrunk by 35 percent in two decades."
Where have
all the children gone?
Yet what is
happening to Japan is not unique to Japan.
Russia's population
is shrinking at two to three times the pace of Japan's. She is losing
half a million people a year. Germany and Ukraine are running Japan
a close race. Only immigration from Africa, South Asia and the Middle
East enables Britain to project population growth. Native-born Brits
are departing and dying.
Indeed, every
one of the East Asian and European nations that scored highest on
the international tests for math and science has a fertility rate
that assures an aging and shrinking population.
Where is world
population growth to come from?
Between
now and 2050, Africa's population will double to 2 billion. Latin
America and Asia will add over a billion people.
Just six nations,
Muslim and poor – Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Nigeria, Pakistan
and Turkey – are expected to add almost 500 million people to their
combined populations by 2050.
If demography
is destiny, the sun is not only setting in the Land of the Rising
Sun. The sun is setting in the West.
March
15, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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