The aging of Japan's workforce is accelerating at a striking pace. Back in 1965, the average age was just 29 years—characteristic of a younger, growing population. By 1995, this had climbed to 38 years as birth rates declined. Fast forward to 2025, and Japan's median age now sits at 48 years, marking one of the world's most aged societies. This demographic shift carries major implications: shrinking labor pools, rising healthcare costs, and structural pressures on fiscal policy. For markets and investors tracking macroeconomic cycles, Japan's aging trajectory offers a preview of what developed economies will face—and how central banks may respond with prolonged low-rate environments.
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RugpullTherapist
· 1h ago
Japan's trajectory is truly a mirror reflecting macroeconomic conditions, with a median age of 48 directly disappointing; Europe will inevitably end up like this.
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BlockchainNewbie
· 1h ago
Japan's aging speed is truly astounding, jumping from 29 to 48 years old, how magical is that... It feels like the whole world is heading down this path.
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FloorSweeper
· 1h ago
ngl japan's aging curve is literally the canary in the coal mine for all of us... watching their central bank scramble w/ negative rates while the workforce crumbles? that's the playbook getting written rn
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NotGonnaMakeIt
· 1h ago
Japan's current population crisis is truly a ticking time bomb; it's coming for us soon too, haha.
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WhaleMinion
· 1h ago
The trend in Japan is really amazing, with a median age of 48... we need to quickly copy the homework.
The aging of Japan's workforce is accelerating at a striking pace. Back in 1965, the average age was just 29 years—characteristic of a younger, growing population. By 1995, this had climbed to 38 years as birth rates declined. Fast forward to 2025, and Japan's median age now sits at 48 years, marking one of the world's most aged societies. This demographic shift carries major implications: shrinking labor pools, rising healthcare costs, and structural pressures on fiscal policy. For markets and investors tracking macroeconomic cycles, Japan's aging trajectory offers a preview of what developed economies will face—and how central banks may respond with prolonged low-rate environments.