Japan’s elderly population grows to record 36.25 million

The population of people aged 65 and over in Japan was estimated at 36.25 million as of Sunday, up by 20,000 from a year earlier and hitting a record high, the internal affairs ministry said ahead of Monday’s Respect for the Aged Day.

Such older adults accounted for 29.3% of the country’s total population, up by 0.2 percentage point and also a record high.

The population of those 65 and older included 15,72 million men, or 26.1% of the total male population, and 20.53 million women, or 32.3% of the female population.

The proportion of people aged 65 and over has been increasing since the 1950s. It is expected to reach 34.8% in 2040, when the country’s second baby boomers, or those born between 1971 and 1974, will have joined that age group, according to the National Institute of Population and Social Security Research.

In 2023, the number of workers aged 65 and over rose for the 20th straight year to a record 9.14 million. Of those, 1.32 million were in the wholesale and retail sector, 1.07 million in the medical and welfare sector and 1.04 million in the service sector.

Of all workers aged 15 and over, those aged 65 and older accounted for 13.5%, down by 0.1 point.

Of the population aged 65 and over, 25.2% had a job, unchanged from the previous year.

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