The fluctuating daycare fee is insane. It's crazy how their government wants them to have more children but refuse to make it easier for them to do so.
@wordzmyth6 ай бұрын
So unfair really forcing her out of the workforce. In such an unfair systems you can see their regret even though they want their kids
@postblitz6 ай бұрын
The #1 cause of all of this is the rejection of the cultural values which made Japan what it is in the first place. Japan had families living together under one roof which easily supported both child rearing, expenses and education. When you take the crash course of that into living in couples in apartments where they charge rent of course they can barely manage and only the landlords make bank. Japan just needs to go back to what it was.
@AmandaComeauCreates6 ай бұрын
Its wild to imagine that they literally would rather one parent be unemployed or underemployed in the declining population crisis when that is literally the outcome they are trying to avoid??? They want more people working.......let them work?
@frozenwalkway6 ай бұрын
its almost the same here in the usa if u work a low wage job. 800 a week for day care might as well just stay at home and be with the kid
@sirrebral6 ай бұрын
What would be insane is the opposite policy, in which low to middle-class would-be parents receive less assistance for childcare than higher-earners. Not only is helping those who need it the least an inefficient use of the country's economic activity, it would also create additional stresses on the poor and middle class. In such a scenario, the "best" of bad outcomes might be a counterproductive reduction in the birth rate, and in the worst case, it might result in more children being raised in households that can't afford to educate them or keep them out of trouble.
@THMILLER6 ай бұрын
The girl in white (2:43) is right if the government doesn't create a good standard of life where people can afford to have kids and own things then OFCOURSE the population will decline because people today are educated and think about the costs and time that goes into having a family.
@Lucky55Blue6 ай бұрын
Correct. Also, our modern generation teaches us the value of personal agency and personal choice. That’s why having Children is a losing strategy or inferior Life prospect.
@MyrKnof6 ай бұрын
So, we need less education!
@tobubiify6 ай бұрын
She seems like she learned a lot about it.. and thought a lot about that.. I think she might want a kid so much that she has to think that much about it.. Kinda sad
@nikhilPUD016 ай бұрын
I don't think we need kids, as technology is growing very fast, we don't need population, we will live with robots
@yiyeungwong6 ай бұрын
We live in humanity’s golden age. If that isn’t good enough I don’t know what is.
@princessjello6 ай бұрын
the mom with the husband speaking on the daycare fees really is just eye-opening.
@hildegardvonbingen90923 ай бұрын
If you think about it, people say the main reason they don't have kids is because they can't give them away to Strangers all day. Isn't that a much deeper issue
@AlliWalker18 күн бұрын
@@hildegardvonbingen9092 there's nothing wrong with daycare.
@maswis888 күн бұрын
@@AlliWalker Daycare is actually the indicator how the wrong the system is. You want to have kids, but both parents have to work to make ends meet because only one parent is not enough? Let alone you can't grow with your own children, then why bother having one? Just to help population crisis?
@Derzull246810 сағат бұрын
@@AlliWalker Everything is wrong with the need for daycare.
@Jupitersonlyson6 ай бұрын
If population decline is such a problem , governments should prioritise making it far easier to have kids. Everything seems more important. Military budgets , net zero and so on. Why have kids when you and the child would suffer needlessly.
@VirtousStoic6 ай бұрын
In summary japan conservatism (closed economy and they are so resistant to change even in their own companies) and its government failure to help its citizens is breaking japan And japan is using gambling and media (manga, anime, music, etc) to distract and make money from its citizens without helping them have money in the first place.
@tatsumasa63326 ай бұрын
We make laws and policies for our government to follow so the government is us (Japanese citizen) in the end.
@hyberkonawa2726 ай бұрын
Don't use suffering as an excuse of not having children in marriage cuz Islam are conquering the whole world and forcing people to deny their own culture and beliefs in the name of Sharia-Law. That's why Europe countries such as Sweden has completely shut down the borders. Life is suffering and will always be, even if you don't have children.
@milorxngo6 ай бұрын
@@tatsumasa6332 obviously the people dont run the government corporations and money does
@tatsumasa63326 ай бұрын
@@milorxngo No, we do by picking the reps. there's only half of us go to the vote everytime (worse, our youngsters almost never) that is why the house is so twisted. however not sure how is in your country.
@jamosss6 ай бұрын
Bro found out on an interview that his wife was keeping the baby's gender a secret😂😂😂
@atamo43236 ай бұрын
If they have a girl already, the baby must be a boy to be a surprise.
@waylingtons6 ай бұрын
@@atamo4323not really though 😂. It’s still a surprise if you don’t know what the gender is.
@tobubiify6 ай бұрын
Better than keeping the baby's race
@universeslap6 ай бұрын
@@Cha4kit never meant sex. People used it interchangeably, as they use their/they're because of unawareness.
@Meow34316 ай бұрын
no I think he knows that his wife knows but he just made a joke...
@luxusken056 ай бұрын
"I'm not living for Japan" That girl spilled.
@Vivo119-jf4pp6 ай бұрын
@GoralischeSSGreat replacement theory
@lilacghoste83666 ай бұрын
@GoralischeSSof course alt right wingers
@lordbigsnake6 ай бұрын
@GoralischeSSso you actually wanted to work in a factory from the age of 5 till death make 15 babies and have those also work in factories from 5 till death. I rather go for actually living and have kids that also can live properly but you do you.
@lordbigsnake6 ай бұрын
@GoralischeSS maybe it's time for you to leave la la land and come to the real world then.
@pagodebregaeforro28036 ай бұрын
@GoralischeSSaverage neonazi. Probably hide his views in real life but in internet wastes his little energy on trolling 😂
@ReynardNathaniel6 ай бұрын
this interview has been done 10 years ago, and will be done in the next 10 years. why? cause government doesn't care. they just want to win. how do u win again? cater to majority population. who is the majority population in Japan? not young people. which mean, they will create policy that cater to older generation which has a little if no benefit at all to the younger generation. making their life harder and not wanting to have kids.
@theinktician6 ай бұрын
Maybe. But the population didnt drop as much as it will in the next 10. The Baby Boomer generation is the largest and they're just now starting to decline. 2040 will be a scary time for 日本
@theultimatereductionist75926 ай бұрын
Well said, user-jd!
@dgmojojojo6 ай бұрын
The government care they even wanted to make a ministry that help people to have children but judging by past program i don’t think they get it what’s the core problems: it’s high cost for renting/properties, living costs, and children education.
@bistander6 ай бұрын
That's the same story globally. The older generation are in power and look out for their own interests. And most of the time their interest is keeping their money.
@Hyst446 ай бұрын
They will care a lot more once china gains most of the control in that region. Only about 10 years off from that probably.
@NekoArts6 ай бұрын
From the perspective of a foreigner who's currently pregnant in Japan; while money definitely plays a big role here, I also think that there's much more to it. Since becoming pregnant, I have more or less been treated as nothing more than an incubator for my child and I have faced a lot of bullying from doctors and hospital staff throughout my pregnancy. From what I understand after talking to other mothers (both foreign and Japanese), this is unfortunately not that uncommon and I think that that can put a big role in discouraging women from wanting (more) children. I know for a fact that it has definitely turned me off from the idea of having more children after this one because I truly don't want to have to go through this again. My daughter is due next month so now the focus has begun to shift from my pregnancy to the birth itself and that's an entirely different issue all on its own. Even my husband (Japanese) who's the biggest cheerleader for the medical industry was turned off by the whole experience when the midwife took us on a tour of the birthward a few weeks ago. After we left, he told me that he felt like we had entered a baby-factory where the focus seems to be more on just "getting it done quickly" than what is actually best for mother and child. My own feelings and wishes regarding my birth has been dismissed in favor of what is the most convenient for the staff and their routine and they have made no effort hiding that fact either. A lot of what is done routinely to women during pregnancy and childbirth (whether beneficial or not) are things that the woman has no say in and will be done whether she wants them or not (like episiotomies which are infamously common here). Questioning a routine or treatment isn't encouraged either, they just expect you to shut your mouth and do as you're told. Of course there are exceptions to this and there are hospitals and doctors that are absolutely wonderful and caring to the women they take care of, but unfortunately, my experience seems to be a very common one - especially if you happen to live outside of the bigger cities, like I do. And of course it doesn't end at birth either but the woman in question will still have to face other issues even after the child is born, especially if she happens to be a single mother. All in all, I have to say that Japan doesn't make it easy for a woman to become a parent, even if you put the issue of finances to the side. After having gone through this experience myself, I truly can't fault anyone for not wanting to go through it themselves, especially not if they plan on having more than one child as well. The way I see it, the subsidies and all are great, but if they want more women to want to become mothers then there needs to be a huge overhaul in how mothers are actually treated from the moment of conception as well. There needs to be support extended beyond the financial parts of motherhood as well.
@feylights1666 ай бұрын
Not a mother, but I will add that, much as I love Japan, gender equality is definitely something they are behind in compared to much of the rest of the developed world. When a woman raises a child, she stops being an individual, and her identity becomes "mother". Even within couple dynamics, she stops being a wife and desirable, her identity that of the caregiver of the child(ren). This doesn't only happen in Japan, of course, but a number of gender issues (such as your experience with hospitals) are at play here.
@sirennoir2586 ай бұрын
@feylights166 the change in identity happens for everyone. You turn into a mother. But the change doesn't feel like a burden after you get used to it. Everyone deals with it differently. But there is definitely the loss of you. At first you don't even notice it because once you give birth your entire world is centered around your baby. Nothing else matters. Your soul focus is your baby.
@sirennoir2586 ай бұрын
Once the baby comes out you will be in a bubble for about a year. Only thing that will matter is the baby.
@gabriellarosendo62286 ай бұрын
I saw a Brazilian mom in Japan, she said she was so traumatized about the way she was treated in the birth, that she never wanted to be pregnant again…
@asdfghjjhgf6 ай бұрын
I'm Japanese and I've never heard of a pregnant woman being harassed by a doctor or nurse in a hospital. If that is true, reviews of that hospital would blow up and even make news headlines.
@littlefish21246 ай бұрын
2:02 the lady I believe said it how it is. If Japan wants to address the problem of the declining population/ birth rate they have to improve the quality of life. doing so to create an environment where people can actually have children. along with what the points the couple with a child(ren) states, and the issues they have faced with childcare.
@MShabKMift4 ай бұрын
But then how would the corporates make billions and have cheap labour?? :(
@Camcolito3 ай бұрын
@@MShabKMift Bingo. This is the logical question that everyone is brainwashed not to consider. Quality of life cannot improve without taxing the wealthy, which is taboo.
@decwow2 ай бұрын
Government cannot create a better quality of life. All it can do is take from it's populace and inefficiently spend that on a small portion of the populace. Their birth rate has been negative for 45 years. Nothing the government has done has made any difference in the decline. There's one, and only one, common causal factor across nations around the world with this problem. I'll give you a hint: It starts with "femini...."
@kzm-cb5mr23 күн бұрын
The West had at least got that, but that is not really reversing their population decline.
@DuoLingoJP_0986 ай бұрын
As a japanese myself, l really wanted to have 3 or 4 children to help japan in these crisis and l really want to have 3 or 4 children in my own perspective,but the problem is l can't raise a child by my average salary and my boyfriend is just starting to work as an IT engineer and we're planning to get marry in this year.The only hindrance that me and my partner facing is the inflation...blame all in "inflation" and l know this is inevitable but l hope japanese government try to solve this issues,For example that decrease the tuition that many Japanese paying and all the essential items need to be revise the cost and instead to make more job why not enhance the quality of work more for a long term.
@JonathanAkiraFreudman6 ай бұрын
Girl you are thinking too much about it. Just have children and the government will help you with extra money, so you can use them for children without using your own or your husbands salary.
@nienor15106 ай бұрын
I live in Finland, my husband and I have 3 children (hopefully another one day too), we really had to lower our expectations of our standard of living. We just aren't as wealthy as a generation as our parents were. That was a hard shock to take but we still have a good life. We live in a rural area of Finland, I don't think we could afford kids if we lived in the capital. When you are surrounded by everyone having new fashionable items and luxuries it's easy to become demotivated and overwhelmed but when you are out in nature everything seems more hopeful. Love from Finland, best of luck with your family!
@kayliu6 ай бұрын
@DuoLingoJP_098 your suggestions are fair, but one of the biggest problems Japan is having is the government doesn't have much money in its pocket to do what you suggested. Japan is currently carrying a very large sum of debt, and there's very little the Japanese government can do to help solve the problem.
@Leto2ndAtreides6 ай бұрын
@@nienor1510 You went directly to one of the main problems causing population decline... Big cities, too many other things to spend on. Humanity, it turns out, is really fragile - no better than most other animals that can only lightly handle disruptions to the environment before things start to go awry.
@tonythaiger936 ай бұрын
Try Korea-many parents spend $1000-2000 a month on after-school programs per child. I really wish I'm just joking around.
@dchen10106 ай бұрын
it's not just in japan. Many developed countries are having this issue too! Inflation is one of the reasons why many families can't affford to have kids... rent prices, food, gas, basic necessities have all inflated, but wages haven't kept up.
@PROVOCATEURSK6 ай бұрын
There is a certain minority in Europe that can raise 8 kids without their parents ever working. And the Amercans say those people are oppressed.
@Lubet0TheGreat6 ай бұрын
What are you talking about? The problem is people don't have enough money? Then why the people in poorest countries in the world have the most children? There is a reverse correlation everywhere in the world, the richer the society is, the less children they have, so the problem is def. not a money one.
@reneeroesler99446 ай бұрын
@@Lubet0TheGreatPeople in poorer countries tend to have more kids cause they tend to be less educated and don't have free birth control or anything readily available.
@Raderade1-pt3om6 ай бұрын
Japan is one of the most densely populated country in developed world and birthrate are falling in all of them but in western countries immmigrations fills the gap but local ethnic groups are on decline.
@Sakeus6 ай бұрын
@@reneeroesler9944 That is not the reason. Having kids as soon as possible is natural, but in western countries we are taught that its a setback and your happiness comes first. And happiness doesn't equal having family and kids, grand-kids anymore. It means owning things, doing things. You hear this in the video as well. The instinct to reproduce is being pushed down, but it comes back with a revenge (especially for women). The increase of having a first kid past 35 or even 40+ is concerning. Birth defects are on the rise since people are having kids later and later.
@ANDIBO9876 ай бұрын
The lady in pink said something that it is very true and most people avoid to put the finger on it: in 2024 the narrative is that having kids its an inconvenience and a pain overall. That your life ends and with such mentality people won't even consider it.
@TokyoTaisu6 ай бұрын
Very true. She's quite smart and her suggestions make a lot of sense.
@bakerstreet1016 ай бұрын
Most of the interviewees have very eloquent and thought out answers. Impressive.
@problem464321 күн бұрын
No way, they should find some solution instead of just blaming Government and having no children!
@DidiOxijin6 ай бұрын
I have lived in Japan for 10 years and I quit marrying and having a family because there are so many more issues in the society that discouraged me of raising a child here. Being a parent is already hard enough, thinking about what my child will have to go through was the deal breaker.
@gianluca563815 күн бұрын
"even if the country is in decline, I will prioritize my own happiness" at 6:47 min. I don't think I have to add anything here,just sadness.
@a0me6 ай бұрын
3:10 This is basically it. Raising children costs a lot, and parents don't get much help from the government to ease the burden.
@a0me6 ай бұрын
@@dsn1460 Governments have an interest in fertility rates because they have significant implications for the country’s future, including its economic stability, workforce, and demographic makeup. This is their responsibility.
@bertr67416 ай бұрын
cost of living in Japan is high, the government need to address this
@a0me6 ай бұрын
@@dsn1460 I don’t think you understand what governments are for… Taxpayers fund the government, and in return, the government is responsible for using those funds to improve the lives of its citizens and ensure the country’s overall well-being.
@Anon-tm3uh6 ай бұрын
This is true, if I have children I want them to do whatever they want because it's my choice to have them. Otherwise I'd rather than have them if I can't fully provide whatever they want/need.
@a0me6 ай бұрын
@@bertr6741 The cost of living in Japan is high only in relation to the stagnation of wages. But as you can see from a lot of the comments on KZbin and social media, the corporate media and governments have pulled the wool over the eyes of large swaths of the population and convinced them that it has nothing to do with money...
@DarkSnake495426 ай бұрын
Ahah, his boss 'make a family, your productivity will rise, you will get a raise (not wage, just primes) and the boss will get a better position to get to the upper level'. Just excellent!
@VirtousStoic6 ай бұрын
World has bigger issues lol frankly I don't care. And this video was brainless. Asking what 5-10 humans think doesn't represent entire nation it's called cherry picking
@MACTEP_CHOB6 ай бұрын
Aha and when the kid will get sick, he won`t give him day off, bcuz `there`s noone to work anymore`
@trillstarman6 ай бұрын
1. Increase minimum annual vacation off work from the minimum 10 days to 30 days-Parts of Europe have done this and saw birth rates spike as a result. 2. Strict fines to companies for every vacation day employees do not use. 3. Daycare for ages 0-5 fully paid for by taxes. *Bonus: - Raise the stagnant minimum wage - Health insurance paid at 100% for everything child birth related - Set reasonable and adequate immigration targets
@Elicynderspyro6 ай бұрын
The government is currently giving fines for those companies in which employees don't take at least 5/10< days of annual paid leave. However, because people still won't use their paid leave days, some companies have a policy in which they randomly decide when to use their employee's days. So you might find a random day off in your shift which you really didn't need that much. That also affects those workers, especially foreign, that want to save their days off to use all together for a proper vacation or to go back home. Also, companies might decide to use only 5 days out of those 10 days and the remaining ones are left to be expired. Some kinder companies might accept their employees' request of not deciding their annual paid leave, others though look at the collectivity and refuse such requests. It's even worse than you might think.
@WindupTerminus6 ай бұрын
Europe has all this, our birthrates are quickly approaching Japans levels (or are already there in some parts of Europe). What makes you think these things will solve the issue in Japan when it obviously hasn't happened in Europe? I'm also interested in where you're going to get all the money to do this, since you only propose things that will increase costs, but nothing that would increase revenue.
@asdfghjjhgf6 ай бұрын
sounds like Finland but unfortunately, things aren't going well in Finland either.
@impressivedark26856 ай бұрын
In which European country has the fertility rate spiked? They’re all whining about constantly declining TFR. Even Hungarian tax breaks haven’t worked. Poland a super catholic country has a TFR of 1.10 💀
@kernelscout30776 ай бұрын
more taxes to pay lol. the problem is not financial, its cultural. even in the nordic welfare states population is declining. california recently raised minwage to $20 and 10,000 jobs were lost as a result. the problem is that we have a shitty culture that values short-term gratification, sexual openness, rising porn addiction and participation in sex work(only fans), women arent looking for long term partners because theyre being told they dont need that so its one night stand after one night stand, and men are being demasculated and convinced everything is their fault and, all with decreasing participation in religion affiliation and declining mental health. our liberalized culture is simply incompatible with a successful society. theres a popular theory about the life cycles of empires and what starts the decline is this "And what marked the penultimate age? Defensiveness, pessimism, materialism, frivolity, an influx of foreigners, the Welfare State, and a weakening of religion. To what did he attribute this decadence? Too long a period of wealth and power, selfishness, love of money, and the loss of a sense of duty." we have entered the "age of intellect" where we think we are smarter than everyone who has come before. if that doesnt describe our culture to a T then i dont know what else would.
@terryevans19766 ай бұрын
Great interviews. The couple with the children was by far the most realistic. The impact of such a large population drop will be devastating. It will be even more so on a country like Japan that is heavily invested in a large social welfare system. Without new people paying into the system it will rapidly start to fail in various ways, e.g. the ability to pay promised pensions, medical care, childcare etc.
@PROVOCATEURSK6 ай бұрын
The drop will not be devastating. The evil capitalists will just raise prices and taxes.
@AirbornSoul0136 ай бұрын
100%, but- why tell dead people the future? They created and encouraged the situation they're in, with ample warning to change it
@ne_alexa6 ай бұрын
Would you have a child just to overcome the population crisis?
@dansmith16616 ай бұрын
@@ne_alexa A crisis in a country that doesn't value children.
@cawheeler276 ай бұрын
@@ne_alexaFrom a selfish perspective, yeah. Those without kids will be the worst off. At least if you have kids you’ll have the possibility of having people to help care for you in old age, without them you’ll be left to die as the social safety net collapses. Most younger people aren’t thinking about what life will be like for them decades down the road, when the truly dire consequences of these choices start to play out.
@zorohunter36 ай бұрын
Guy at 0:51 trying to recreate quintessential quintuplets XD
@VirtousStoic6 ай бұрын
He will never afford to give them the lifestyle they deserve. I never get the people who get more kids than they can afford to raise. And 2 parents can't raise that many kids. In the old days yes because the entire neighborhood raise the kids supported each other etc Thus the saying it takes a village to raise kids But with today individualism and isolation it's just unfeasible Therfore that person is actually hurting those kids by having so many
@Lianpe986 ай бұрын
@@VirtousStoic Don't judge people you don't know
@Cafeston6 ай бұрын
Him wanting specifically many girls makes me slightly uncomfortable.
@Maityist6 ай бұрын
@@Cafeston Would him saying he wanted 5 sons make you uncomfortable as well? How about if a woman said she wanted 5 sons, does that make you uncomfortable? Stop your pre-disposed notions.
@zeldasaurusrex16476 ай бұрын
@@Cafeston he literally gave a reason tho? why are u judging someone you dont know? weird that you think like that
@coutxxStatix6 ай бұрын
I usually don't watch interviews because they're all sound bytes. This was well done and you asked actual thoughtful questions. Good video!
@ruru79996 ай бұрын
note for team Asian Boss --> i think it'd be better putting the subtilte by the actual prices in yen. As viewer, we often try to compare between their expected costs and the average life costs in japan so it'd be hard if we read it in USD
@limterlam6 ай бұрын
Precisely...
@hannah600006 ай бұрын
Plus, as viewers we are from all over the world. USD isn’t a reference currency for day to day activities for most people outside the US.
@matty68786 ай бұрын
im american but i agree. right now the yen/usd is going up and down. i can understand japanese enough to get the gist of it but if any were to use a frame of reference they may not acknowledge the price of inflation
@aaronjaben79139 күн бұрын
Increasing the standard of living for its citizens is the #1 thing any country can do to promote having children. People are more likely to want children if they feel they can afford them.
@doesfireburn85326 ай бұрын
this whole dating/relationship/baby problem seems to be a trademark of our generation. In Germany it may not be as bad as japan right now but in a couple more years it might become as bad. What i also noticed is that the us is having a major dating problem
@nerd25446 ай бұрын
don't worry the increasing amounts of ahmeds and mohammeds in your country will raise your birth rates again 🤣🤣
@Foreignmonk346 ай бұрын
the problem exists in every developed country, and none has found an answer...
@anonomas61266 ай бұрын
Limited internet make people go outside to interact and meet each other.
@SpookiBunny6 ай бұрын
@@Foreignmonk34 lack of community and high costs of living are the main issue. big cities put people in an environment where they're just isolated fending for themselves while trying to make a living and in developed countries with basic education that means people know not to have children in these conditions. meanwhile smaller cities care much more about the well being of their inner communities while providing a good life for much cheaper.
@anaana-ze8rd6 ай бұрын
Germany and Japan are almost the same in size. But, Japan has 40 million more people living it. IMO, the problem is overinflated.
@SkySpiral86 ай бұрын
I work in childcare for mostly upper middle class parents. There’s no birth rate crisis when parents are comfortable enough to have a career, children, and afford childcare all at the same time. Heck, one of our kids was a frozen embryo once. You know how much that costs? The overpowered corporations making money off of underpaid labor are contributing to the struggles of middle class and lower. Don’t blame women for being “selfish” now that some finally get to do the things men have always been allowed to do-namely, choose our lifestyle.
@NowioFel6 ай бұрын
All that brings them is 6 out 10 being on some form of anti deppressants and other drugs just to cope with reality. Meanwhile young mothers don't even need external vitamins because their hormone levels and life satisfaction is in healthy levels.
@SkySpiral86 ай бұрын
@@NowioFel huh? Anemia and depression is rampant among postpartum mothers
@NowioFel6 ай бұрын
@@SkySpiral8 And those go away, if they even occur, after 2 to 6 weeks. What is your point, to deny happiness for decades for a potential depression of 2 months though which your husband and child will help you on every step?
@SkySpiral86 ай бұрын
@@NowioFel you are describing an ideal situation, not reality
@NowioFel6 ай бұрын
@@SkySpiral8 not every place is as backwards in medical care and familial and community bonds as your place of residence seems to be.
@friedenstone97796 ай бұрын
My wife has pressured me on multiple occasions to leave my job in the US and find a position working a GS job in Japan in order to permanently move our family out there (she is Okinawan). She feels our daughter will be better off with childcare being much more affordable than what we have in the States. Watching this only reaffirms what I have already known. My wife is mistaken. Life in Japan would be much easier with my California salary. The average career opportunity in Japan does NOT pay California salaries.
@VirtousStoic6 ай бұрын
U made a good call not going to japan it's decaying as a country Japanese pride patriotism ego and oblivious ignorance makes them not understand the economical implications of their hedonistic lifestyle I recommend everyone watch a video that explains the problems with countries with a very large aging population and a very small young population like japan and south korea. Because so many people seem to not realize the issue is so big [How the Coming Population Collapse Will Change Society Forever] KZbin Channel name @Moon
@VirtousStoic6 ай бұрын
Japan is having a marriage crisis, young people arent interested in marriage, and some dont even date. People also dont want to have kids and a tradiotional life. There is a job crisis, many young men cant even get a job, and if they get a job it isnt well paying and sometimes isnt related to their career. In summary japan conservatism (closed economy and they are so resistant to change even in their own companies) and its government failure to help its citizens is breaking japan And japan is using gambling and media (manga, anime, music, etc) to distract and make money from its citizens without helping them have money in the first place.
@Colourisedspoon6 ай бұрын
Your wife is not mistaken, Japan is much cheaper, you dont need californian salary to live a californian life in Japan.
@VirtousStoic6 ай бұрын
@@Colourisedspoon u didn't understand a word he said at all. Read it 3 times lol
@erikad05116 ай бұрын
Life is cheaper there tho...The 1 woman said 3-4 bedroom for $1500 rent... you're not finding that in CA or anywhere but the south (maybe)
@AmandaComeauCreates6 ай бұрын
I wanna be friends with the lady who said that although her country is in decline, she will prioritize her own happiness. Its a breath of fresh air to hear someone less patriotic and attached to the idea of 'nation' over self, and it heartens me to know that most of these people recognize the gross income issues associated with the population crisis.
@jayc3420096 ай бұрын
Come to the uk, plenty of us have given up and hate our country and politicians
@matheussanthiago96856 ай бұрын
@GoralischeSS nation simp
@shamicentertainment12625 ай бұрын
Yeah sort of. If everyone has that mindset than civilization as we know it is over. so idk how good of a mindset it actually is long run. Selfishness has it's place, but if we want a modern society to keep functioning we need enough people to maintain it
@TheAntinowherelane5 ай бұрын
Yeah she was a real one. Best responses in the interviews tbh. Coming out with that うるさい about her dads opinion was hella honest and open. Respect.
@wilnur48464 ай бұрын
jew detected
@SimonGrayDK6 ай бұрын
4:59 jfc what a ridiculous system... so people drop out of the labour market because the increase in daycare fees is so much greater thereby systemically *increasing* prices for everyone while also not contributing to the tax base. Maybe the government should make the lower fee the fee that everyone pays...?
@Opblaasmaatje6 ай бұрын
Works just like that in the Netherlands, probably also other european countries
@SimonGrayDK6 ай бұрын
@@Opblaasmaatje In Denmark you get a discount on daycare when you have more children.
@WindupTerminus6 ай бұрын
That's assuming the extra tax revenue you gain from factory farming your children so that the mother can work makes up for the problems that leads to down the road.
@justicedemocrat93576 ай бұрын
Absolutely ridiculous you want the government to raise my taxes to subsidise people's choice to have a kid? No way.
@dansmith16616 ай бұрын
@@justicedemocrat9357 Taxes are high enough despite crushing wallets. The welfare state is unsustainable by design.
@clanpsi6 ай бұрын
That bit about daycare prices changing based on household income is phucking bullshyte. How could the government think that is okay? Especially with such a low ceiling ($60,000). Absolutely ridiculous, no wonder nobody wants to have kids.
@tman2296 ай бұрын
It's ridiculous even before that. Pregnant women and their fetus are not covered by Healthcare, so you're paying that out of pocket in full. And pray there aren't any complications as the hospitals will take advantage and try to milk you.
@trawrtster60976 ай бұрын
@@tman229a good chunk of that can be covered by vouchers, which pretty much all municipal offices give out to pregnant women to help cover the costs of prenatal care As for costs associated with birth, there is more paperwork involved, but the local government will cover almost all, if not all of the costs associated with birth
@LizLo20206 ай бұрын
My family went to visit Japan recently. I was surprised when I learned from our guide that certain services in Japan are socialized. i.e., the lower your income, the lower your rent, daycare, etc.. The parents in the video likely did some calculations, and found out that they would be better off if the mom had no income to avoid higher rent and daycare. I'm guessing what she was referring to as "part-time" work is a side hustle that would be off-the-books to keep the cost of rent, daycare, and other services low.
@ExpoPredzel6 ай бұрын
Explanation, where you missed about "part-time". It's not off the books. It's official, but reduced hours. Full time in 1st world counts 35-40 hours per week. Part-time means you work less hours and get proportionally less pay. You aren't using your full potential, but have more time for another hustle or endeavours.
@mannycalavera23356 ай бұрын
It is the same in my country. Cost of living has risen so much that regular people are no longer able to do regular things.
@ishiiflix6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@chromatic20066 ай бұрын
The only reason that population decline is a problem is because we've built this economic system to depend on infinite perpetual growth, and have poor resources for taking care of the elderly. If the population were to naturally drop by half, the human race would still carry on. We aren't going extinct. In fact too many people can be a big problem. Let people live full happy lives, and the population will stabilize.
@evek13496 ай бұрын
Thank you, finally someone with common sense
@M.L1890Ай бұрын
No truer facts have been spoken.
@John-fk2kyАй бұрын
The population isn’t going to drop “naturally”. It’s going to drop by a lot in a hurry with a population that is disproportionately elderly for a rather long time. That’s going to be an economic disaster the likes of which we’ve never seen. Like it or not, that’s the current system, and the inevitable crash is going to utterly suck. The resulting drop is entirely unnatural. Technically, the drop itself isn’t unnatural; while tracking global populations would mask it, having local major population drops has happened before. However, those regional population drops were not nearly global, didn’t create a population chart looking like an upside down pyramid (the opposite of healthy and growing or stable), and didn’t involve global supply chains. Like you, I’m confident the human race will be fine, but the situation will inevitably be very, very rough, with massive economic and geopolitical instability.
@chromatic2006Ай бұрын
@@John-fk2ky It'll be painful for someone, sure. But the current system is not sustainable forever. We can't just keep forever increasing population to prop up a system that depends on infinitely fresh workers to outnumber elderly. At some point it will crash, and better now than later as sorry as that sounds. We as humans will not be able to think up a third solution, or if we do, we will not be able to come together to make it happen. So just like so many other events in the past, there will be pain involved. But humans will survive. Is it unavoidable? It's not unavoidable. It is improbable to go any differently? It is improbable that it will turn out any differently.
@TechnoMinarchist8 күн бұрын
Then don't expect technological development to keep at the same rate it is today.
@skunkjulio6 ай бұрын
I encourage @Asian Boss to do a similar street interview in Sendai. When I lived there from 2021-2023, there were families and kids everywhere. I think the attitude is very different outside of Tokyo (IE: the rest of the country)
@ChickensAndGardening6 ай бұрын
Also the town of Nagi in Okayama Prefecture where people are having 3-4 children because of generous benefits. The town decided over 20 years ago to make it a priority to encourage larger families, and they have succeeded. Now are being visited by delegations from all over Japan as well as South Korea, seeking to copy their approach. Hopefully it will succeed.
@natashadickson48196 ай бұрын
Good point
@marioh51726 ай бұрын
Also there are communities with great employers… lots of support for families.
@qawsedrftgyhujikolp19196 ай бұрын
Typically, a country's largest cities tend to have the lowest birth rates.
@707bear36 ай бұрын
@@ChickensAndGardening I saw a Japanese couple who have 10 children on Instagram
@Vic-ek1fv6 ай бұрын
The lady in white has it very clear. She knows that if she has children, her life is over. My cousins in South Korea say similar things. When a woman has a child. she lives only for that child. She cannot get promotions at work. She cannot go out once per month to have lunch with friends. Men provide and that's it. They work 8 to 10 hours, but when they get home, the work is done. A mom in Japan works 24/7. No wonder they don't want to have children, they gain nothing from it
@sirmister90996 ай бұрын
teaching english in japan and learning about the lives of stay at home moms there, you are completely wrong. they go out daily to cafes, fitness clubs, english lessons, and even have time to meet their boyfriends while controlling their husbands paycheck, giving him 20 bucks for lunch and pocketing the rest for themselves. japanese men are tired of being used, thats the problem.
@nathanielmills46786 ай бұрын
Depends on each woman's values. Some value career, some value raising a child. Life being over for one having a child may be life just becoming interesting for another.
@Vic-ek1fv6 ай бұрын
@@sirmister9099 Girl bosses
@Vic-ek1fv6 ай бұрын
@@nathanielmills4678 I’m sure that it is interesting and rewarding, but it carries a great cost. And more women don’t see that cost worth it anymore
@jjb26556 ай бұрын
Japanese and South Korean men definitely work way more than 8-10 hours a day.
@benfreiler40543 ай бұрын
It’s definitely a complex issue. I ultimately believe that people need to be convinced to have kids and should never be forced to, but I also don’t think many people are thinking everything through. Many of these answers talk about prioritizing happiness and quality of life over quantity. I think many people underestimate just how much of our prosperity and quality of life is dependent on a healthy population size. How can you have any wealth and happiness if you’re elderly and have no one to care for you, no pension system because it’s collapsed, if your economy is not competitive? Japan may possibly be looking at a scenario where they will be much poorer, and not just on a national level. It’s difficult to prioritize personal happiness if you’re poor.
@nadialum89586 ай бұрын
in Singapore, mother's get childcare subsidy when they work. It is the opposite in Japan. That's why mothers not entering workforce in Japan.
@Shrey1g6 ай бұрын
or you can say women that are not entering workfoce are becoming mothers, they chose rasing kids over being corporate slave.
@niello59446 ай бұрын
And it's worse than that too, because there are social stigmas on women working.
@thomasgrabkowski82836 ай бұрын
Yet Singapore’s birth rate is even lower than Japan now
@by-vs5dm6 ай бұрын
2023 birth rate singapore : 0.97 japan : 1.21 I wonder why Singapore's birth rate is lower than Japan's.
@rubiesfame6886 ай бұрын
@@by-vs5dmJapan is a country with a big population so there are people having multiple kids who make up for the ones that don't have kids doesn't change the fact that their population is decreasing
@CoffeeandCrochet6 ай бұрын
13:20 wow that's was rivh of that dude's boss to say he should start a family knowing very well they aren't giving their employees a proper salary in order to raise kids. It irks these employers that the younger generation isn't having kids so they can't force them to work for unpaid overtime and threaten to fire them if they don't 🙄 People with kids are usually force to stay with a horrible job because they can't afford to leave but when you're single it's much easier to fend just for yourself.
@MilkTeaASMR6 ай бұрын
seriously great interviews and i love hearing Japanese spoken on deep topics in a natural way for listening practice. ❤
@arisuatlast6 ай бұрын
14:22 She gave an insanely spot-on answer here that will go over many politicians' heads. Declining population, and yet crowds are getting worse. We all already knew this but the gov't really needs to double down on encouraging investment in more sparely populated areas and do whatever it takes to undo hypercentralization. Right now only retail megacorporations like AEON are taking that responsibility, and we need something more meaningful than that. While Tokyo's density is managed incredibly well it's unsustainable from a QoL perspective and will continue to give people every reason to not start a family. Sure lots of people realize this, and small-scale machiokoshi efforts have been impressive, but as of now it's not nearly enough. When I visit rural areas they absolutely have the right mindset within the scope of what they can do, but Tokyo is just too powerful at the moment and is devouring the country inside-out.
@hildegardvonbingen90923 ай бұрын
Are people forced to live in Tokyo? I mean with all those excess death to live births shouln't there be like enough free Apartments?
@michelleg76 ай бұрын
The thing is no one can really afford to have kids or live on their own with the cost of living in the world, it's insane how high the inflation has been. The cost of food and just things in general has been rough.
@VirtousStoic6 ай бұрын
Trust me it's not inflation it's the greed of the elites. Covid was a reset to price change the earth making all humans salaries cut by 20-40% depending on ur relative inflation in ur nation. Don't believe go look at turkey inflation it's horrendous almost 50%
@shannongrossen88856 ай бұрын
@@User-7847and they realistically shouldn't, that's what we should all try to avoid
@oyuyuy6 ай бұрын
Utter nonsense.
@oyuyuy6 ай бұрын
@@shannongrossen8885 Why?
@paodbdauw6 ай бұрын
@@oyuyuy Why? Because we are not as dumb as you precisely.
@danutmh6 ай бұрын
The biggest issue that i find on average is the centralization of industry and jobs in and around "mega cities" , like Tokyo for instance. Everything is too crowded and competitive for people to have a decent life.
@BrightElk6 ай бұрын
Not Japanese nor do I live in Japan but it is extremely hard to find housing where I live in Canada at the moment. Housing has been extremely neglected here yet the government continues to complain about the low birth rate but instead of fixing it and making the country a pleasant place to live for the people who are already here they want to bandaid it with foreigners and look the other way. What will Canada do when they discover that the foreigners quickly run into the exact same issue and learn it’s not worth it for them to have children also? We need more space for our growing family but cannot find a bigger home because the vacancy rate in our area is .1%. Where would the baby go? We wanted to have more children but decided to get a vasectomy and focus on the one child we can manage. The government will soon have to learn that you cannot fix the population crisis with just foreigners. If Canada is a hard place to live the problem will only continue.
@csp61216 ай бұрын
Everything comes back to wealth inequality. Back when there weren't ultra billionaires and an actual middle class, families were abundant. Back in the 60's and 70's, a person with a high school degree could work in a factory and make enough to buy a house, two cars, support a family, and the wife could afford to stay home with their kids. Fast forward to today, we're up in arms about paying a $20 minimum wage when median rent has jumped up into the thousands. It doesn't matter how hard that Walmart worker or Amazon factory worker works when homes cost half a million or even a million+ depending on your state. We need to eat the rich. Getting wealthy is fine but nobody needs billions in generational wealth. Raise the taxes on rich people. Taking care of your grandkids is fine. But raise inheritance taxes so you're not creating a ruling class that stays in power for 10 generations. Build more houses. Create rules to make it more expensive for foreign ownership of homes. Encourage and subsidize fields like health care and nursing... more money in STEM... we don't need a gazillion English Literature or Sociology majors. And please give public teachers a substantial raise (along with higher standards to become a teacher) so we get the best talent instructing our next generation.
@SparkSphereIdeas6 ай бұрын
I agree. The problem is the government is owned by those ultra rich. And any policies that the government try to do to shorten the gap of wealth will be seen as "socialist" by the people. it's because of US history as successful democratic nation. free market only works to a point, market can't grow indefinitely.
@VirtousStoic6 ай бұрын
True but sadly will never ever ever ever happen. 0.1% of earth owns 99.99% of earth And the 0.1% of earth are more powerful than the 0.9% of earth. So much so that if the top 0.9% of earth and the 99% of normal humans combined they couldn't do anything against the 0.1%
@arisakawano63966 ай бұрын
Agree with most of this but there are not a gazillion literature and sociology majors. Stem majors are more popular than humanities anyways and I still think they are also important in order to make sure the technology we make is being used ethically and effectively. Also, people should be able to choose their majors how they want instead of being told what to study in order to appease the needs of a capitalistic system. In general more funding for education for sure though!
@csp61216 ай бұрын
@arisakawano6396 This isn't just the shortage of engineers. There is a shortage of health care professionals, yes? This includes nurses, doctors, caretakers. This will especially be important as the world population trends older and people live longer, with fewer young people to backfill. I would argue even teaching needs more teachers with STEM backgrounds because of the increasing number of complex subject matters, and the technical understanding to teach it properly. Everyone can choose their majors but we should have a longer term outlook. The government or corporations should incentivize and even subsidize the industries we need more people in. One of the criticisms in this video was that salaries remain stagnant. Eighteen year old college students have no idea how much income a family needs or how much money different occupations make. If there was more information and transparency about expected salary over time, it may encourage young people to prioritize longer term wealth and financial stability even if it's something "boring" like math or accounting. Can we agree that a good number of liberal arts majors choose their path not because of genuine interest, but because it's easier and less challenging? I want to remove these hurdles and get people into industries that are high paying and will need more people.
@iamnemoo6 ай бұрын
Well pre-50's most people didn't make it to old age. Even your children had a high chance of dying. In the Victorian era babies had a 50% of surviving. Some countries celebrate a baby's first 100 because it used to be that babies had a 50% of making it that far. The baby boomers came and medicine improved so much now everyone is surviving.
@Skandinavisk6 ай бұрын
Super interesting video! Being from Sweden, I have a hard time understanding the way Japan is approaching this. So, if I am understanding this correctly: 1. You pay for the delivery of your child. 2. You pay for any complications during delivery of your child. 3. If you have health (birth?) insurance that covers (hopefully) all of the above. 4. There is no roof on the amount you pay for child care. 5. There is no pressure on companies to provide good support for leaving to tend for your child, or for your return to the work force when the child is old enough. No wonder people are wary of getting kids. What about health insurance for kids, do you have to pay that from day one, or is there an age until the government covers for the health of your child with free health care?
@frankstrawnation6 ай бұрын
The birth rates in your country aren't that higher and I suspect that if it weren't for the high fertility of immigrants, your country birth rate would be even lower than Japan's. People can complain about health insurance and daycare subsidies, but seems clear that's not the problem at all, because the countries that have more generous policies face the very same demographic problems.
@user-zo9ty4yn9y6 ай бұрын
Literally the percentage of white people in your country is shrinking. I wonder if Sweden's 'white birth rate' is actually higher than Japan's. It's really funny how Westerners think that low birth rates only happen in Asia.
@m3gstarrr4364 ай бұрын
@@frankstrawnationso what’s the problem ??
@tomasrocha61394 ай бұрын
@@frankstrawnation Immigrant fertility isn't high enough to have an impact simce there aren't that many of them
@editfazekas38542 ай бұрын
@@tomasrocha6139 Immigrants typically have 4-6 kids (Muslims, Africans), so even if only 10 % of the population comes from that demographic (it is true in Sweden) then it makes a big dent in the overall stats.
@andrewcrane51056 ай бұрын
I love how forward and easy the second guys way of thinking is
@Naronaxie6 ай бұрын
If they allowed us half Japanese people to have dual citizenship past the age of 22, I'd gladly come raise my kids there while my husband works remote getting paid in USD. I just want the option of being a citizen of both without renouncing my American citizenship.
@VesperJester6 ай бұрын
Fleeing immigrants really are something. Why do you care about a country that you and your family abandoned just to live in the US? I don't understand the cowardly mentality.
@vegassincity7026 ай бұрын
We don't want you here hafu.
@jayc33day6 ай бұрын
@@vegassincity702ur def white 😂
@vegassincity7026 ай бұрын
@@jayc33day so what.. Deal with it.
@jayc33day6 ай бұрын
@@vegassincity702 deleting your own comment after you got called out 🤣
@zanity03176 ай бұрын
the husband and wife duo was best for me they brought out a bunch of thinking thoughts
@retryhikaru1844 ай бұрын
These people are pretty clever, I really enjoyed watching it
@abigailmaturana7416 ай бұрын
“im not living for japan” what a powerful statement, i like her lol
@TaiwoYemz6 ай бұрын
Their answers are understandable, especially what issues face after having a child. Gov should do more.
@dracoazur6 ай бұрын
Another issue is the centralization. Everyone wants/needs to be close to Tokyo. There seems to be a lot of rural areas with low population in Japan. Decentralization surely should help.
@frenchalien91086 ай бұрын
1/3 of japan is empty because there are just no existing jobs available in these places. So the life cost and competition becomes utter madness and concentrated around mega cities such as tokyo
@Sisyanor6 ай бұрын
11:58 I love how this woman talks and thinks this through.
@endahp61922 ай бұрын
not only does the financial restriction made people wary of having children but people's attitudes tend to not focus on the wellbeing of the parents and children but more on the notion "oh no our country's population is declining we how do we make people breed more?" in the sense that it's too focused on increasing the numbers instead of properly acknowledging that financial problems are not the only root of the problem. I read a comment of a woman who had a child in japan and the people around her treated her merely as an incubation for the baby she carried which completely changed her entire outlook on having more than one child, the whole experience even unnerved her husband saying that none of the services actually treated the mother as an actual human being who needed proper physical and mental care as much as the baby or even more. This reminded me of the fact that my parents had children when they were too young and weren't financially stable, this lead to stress, and these stress lead to abuse toward me and my siblings, these experiences really harmed us and strained our relationship as siblings. I respect people who delayed having children or decided to be child-free because they know they wont be able to provide the best life they can offer to their child(ren). I wish more people (healthcare workers especially) recognise that pregnancy is not just growing a baby in a womb then pop it out and done, it takes a heavy toll on the mother's physical and mental wellbeing, and with the financial challenges that are present nowadays it surely aint helping. Because once you have a child, that child will be your responsibility for years even decades.
@pratosaurusrex11283 ай бұрын
Seems like Japan and South Korea are the canaries in the coal mine. It’s interesting to hear about daycare in Japan. In the U.K. to put 1 child through daycare full time is the equivalent to around 80% of the average persons pay before tax. There is government funded assistance to lower this however it doesn’t make financial sense for the average couple to do this, even with the assistance. My wife and I make it work by putting our child in daycare 3 days a week and get help from my parents the other 2 days. Even then the average payment per month with assistance is 62% of what we pay for the mortgage.
@Katsura-San1243 ай бұрын
Letting randos raise your kids is a bad idea.
@offgridas6 ай бұрын
I have two kids, and I've never found them to cost a significant amount, I still have my fun, cars, motorbikes, hunting trips, travel, buying property, building. My daughter is 14 and my son is 5. Ive always been self employed. Not sure what everyone does woth their money tbh.
@zzrroott64596 ай бұрын
they work in a cubicle till 11pm. Japanese have to be the weakest group of people out there
@annwood68129 күн бұрын
So how did your childbirth go? Did you get an episiotomy? How long did it take you to recover from childbirth. How long did you breastfeed while on your motorcycle?
@ghostofkyiv34225 ай бұрын
11:29 I actually cried when she said how much a 3-4 bedroom apartment/house would cost to rent… $1,300 usd is sooo cheap I have a family home now and our mortgage is 4,500 a month for 5 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms. Before my family bought this home (myself and my three sisters) all lived separately in different cities within the same state. I had a 1 bedroom 1 bathroom 150 sq/ft house my rent was $1,900/month, my oldest sister had a 2 bedroom 1 bath $2,200/month, middle sister had a studio apartment 200 sq/ft $1,600/month my youngest sister was sharing a college dorm with 4 other students all had the same scholarship my sister room and board for that dorm was $17,000/year that is $1,416/month for just her the total cost all 4 girls paid per month for a 350 sq/ft studio apartment basically was $5,666/month.
@0Flow06 ай бұрын
Help those who want kids and leave us alone who don't want them 👍
@savagesweetheart906 ай бұрын
♥️🙌🏻♥️
@mysterioanonymous32066 ай бұрын
Then cancel the transfer from young to old people through Pensions and Healthcare expenditure and no one would give af, trust me. The problem is that you people think you should get all that when you don't contribute anything. So better start saving up, will you? You're talking now but in 20y this will be a public, mainstream debate and there will be repercussions. I told you. Chances are you'll need a lot of support when you age so don't come crying with your broken hip and diabetes and whatnot. Because no one will give af. Just go through your savings, and sfter those 1.5y you go to the forest and compost yourself OK? Because the labour force, the children of today, don't owe you a f'in thing. They'll let your body rot in the streets and they're right to do so.
@qopiqq36296 ай бұрын
Only if my kids don't have to pay for your pension!
@ant77236 ай бұрын
@@qopiqq3629 Wow, never thought of it that way. It’s still weird to have kids just for them to feed you isn’t it?
@deadmoney55806 ай бұрын
@@ant7723 Not really.
@thereversepolarbear6 ай бұрын
It's funny how all the men have such ambitions to have so many children to 'help society' - but they wouldn't be bearing the cost as much as the women. The Women are largely saying - no and for good reason. The men bare economic costs but state and maybe company pension contributions would still be paid - career advancement - pay rises - future earning potential is all largely maintained. The women seem to have to sacrifice fundamental personal financial security, stop working, and become completely dependent on the partner. Which is a very dangerous place to be. What happens if their partnership fails, what happens if they divorce and they become single parents - they may become extremely poor overnight? Or if they divorce later on in life and for the years of child care - their were no or not enough pension payments and their former husband has not made provisions for them, and in their retirement they are suddenly very poor. Actually this sort of thing has happened to women for millenia - but now women can much more easily protect themselves and choose a more economically secure life. Their is less cultural, legal obligation to marry and have children.
@FabioJoseph-wx5nm6 ай бұрын
Even living in a densely populated country such as Indonesia as an Indonesian myself, the prospective of me having a family and raising children is unthinkable because of the chaotic situation in our country where corruption run rampant inside out. It is very though to live by myself, let alone raising future generation and let them shoulder my pain is horrendous.
@juangal75695 ай бұрын
This always seems to be a trend with developed countries. I think another way of looking at it is aside from policies which is an aspect they can control is the culture, specifically work and dating.
@Ari-ju8ry6 ай бұрын
I think one of the problems is that the truly magical moments with children happen in the privacy of your own home, in the most relaxed, least rushed time of day, when your children are in their element and you’re not stressed about their behavior. For us, that’s bedtime stories. And that’s simply never going to be filmed and shared on social media. But the sparks that fly in those moments, cannot be put into words ❤
@demin7896 ай бұрын
The girl in pink is killing me "news about birthrate are always bad so maybe we should watch something happy on tv" lmao. She is everything.
@nopenot13103 ай бұрын
Bread and circus
@p.andreacastillo2086 ай бұрын
I think population decline is a world wide phenomenon right now. In France and Germany (both countries I have lived in) people is also recently talking about this problems. There’s a really low number of births in this countries.
@jayc3420096 ай бұрын
When birth rates decline, they never go back to replacement rate.
@BeefDX6 ай бұрын
$190,000 US for a single salary is remarkably high, and certanly not the normal expectation for a family of 4. This is especially true in Japan, a country whose median salary is about 75% of what it is in the US ($36,000 in Japan versus $48,000 in the US). To make $190,000 a year in Japan would put you somewhere around the top 3% of earners, that's certainly far more than what is necessary to raise 2 kids, unless you have an insane lifestyle.
@TokyoTaisu6 ай бұрын
Yeah he's bragging but aim for the moon fall for the stars he might hustle his way op to 20M a year still not bad innit
@backupforthevideos38614 ай бұрын
Here's how you fix the declining population, in general: 1. Fix socio-economic decline and inequality. 2. Fix jurisdictions and revise laws. 3. Revise and re-comprehend education as a whole. 4. Set strict punishments for bad work environments. 5. Focus on general mental health and the quality of the populace. 6. Destigmatize intimate relations and stop making people feel uncomfortable with it. 7. Provide future prospects and hope for better opportunities. 8. Fix the general lack of mutual respect between individuals of varying ages. 9. Hunt down those who try to exploit the youth for personal gain. 10. Cultivate a social structure that encourages resting and spending time with loved ones, rather than overwork. And so on... As you can see, this problem is far more multi-faceted than we'd like to believe, so simplistic solutions aren't going to cut it.
@exopotato94146 ай бұрын
I really dont get why the daycare would increase fees with income of Household , this is very wrong
@John-fk2kyАй бұрын
That’s what’s called a progressive tax system. The increase in fees for higher incomes supposedly supports the lower costs for lower incomes. Still ridiculous, but the reasoning is used everywhere you pay a higher tax rate the higher your income is.
@Lucky55Blue6 ай бұрын
If the Japanese government truly wants the production of more Children, listen to women and help them have the benefits of financially raising a child conducive to their choice of parenthood. Because parenthood now is a choice and it has to be fully benefiting to both Men and Women if they will decide to have Children. Full daycare, work et cetera. Otherwise, people will look the other way and see the benefits of bachelorhood instead which outweighs the sufferings of parenthood. My Opinion.
@시청용계정-c1c6 ай бұрын
If the Japanese government really wants to have more children, turn women into machines whose only job is to give birth lol. Yes, this is why the birth rate in Africa is so crazy high.
@natsuds16 ай бұрын
While I agree, they also have to make it so the system itself discourages single motherhood.
@frankstrawnation6 ай бұрын
Why people insist with daycare and subsidies if those policies never worked in any place?
@jayc3420096 ай бұрын
It's a 2 way issue, in Japan there are men who hide away in their parents basements. If we encourage more women to have children, they are going to struggle finding men who want children too.
@Lucky55Blue6 ай бұрын
@@frankstrawnation Because as shown in the video, Daycare cost money and Parenthood is a dismal prospect choice compared to being Single, Free and Individualistically independent. How to make Parenthood palatable??? It’s like climbing an uphill battle and not even a convincing one at that.
@wkzsАй бұрын
02:02 She's so on point. They better do something with economic problems and stabilise it. Otherwise there will be a big problem for future generations
@qopiqq36296 ай бұрын
The problem with living for yourself is that you use alot of things everyday that are being payed for by others. The less children there are, the less money and welfare there will be. You can't do anything you like when you have to work 14 hours a day 7 days a week because pensions are no longer possible and you'll need to safe up for the day that you are too old to work and have no one to help you
@VirtousStoic6 ай бұрын
Japanese pride patriotism ego and oblivious ignorance makes them not understand the economical implications of their hedonistic lifestyle I recommend everyone watch a video that explains the problems with countries with a very large aging population and a very small young population like japan and south korea. Because so many people seem to not realize the issue is so big [How the Coming Population Collapse Will Change Society Forever] KZbin Channel name @Moon
@Meow34316 ай бұрын
I think in todays society raising children isn't seen as something admirable anymore. The mother is supposed to do it on the side while working etc. Yeah... I guess this is a deeper rooted problem many developed countries are facing
@ohmielevisope423712 күн бұрын
Bro people don't have children because of mindset it ain't about money. There are SO MANY couples that have more than enough money to raise the next generation and they don't do it because they priorotize their own happyness and personal grind more than raising the next gen. As a adult you should be looking to find a mate and have children with them so that humanity can keep thriving. If you do not have children then the generations that come after you will pay the price of your selfishness.
@timekeeper62346 ай бұрын
I'm an American, but I grew up in germany. These videos sometimes kind of remind me of germany in a weird way. Like, you will still find all kinds of conflicting opinions on things, but by enlarge people are almost always well informed on issues. I feel like this is not the case in the US.
@freckledfox73086 ай бұрын
I think most Americans are very informed of what is going on. But being such a big country with broad demographics and financial systems it may vary state to state or even in cities within that state.
@asfsfas24356 ай бұрын
don't think it's just a Population Crisis, is about having more old people than young people, less labor in workforce. And lower GDP that kind of stuff
@VirtousStoic6 ай бұрын
@Leonardo_Mantovani yup check my comments on the video people don't like the truth and get triggered
@lizzyisbored98826 ай бұрын
I mean like having more kids can cause expential growth and may cause the opposite problem of not having enough living space. As you said the reall issue is too many old people and that's because those old people came from the transition of maternal and natal helth care meaning less women and less infants died. Before pregnancy related care and birth control the strategy was to get pregnant a lot and hope half the kids live.
@John-fk2kyАй бұрын
@@lizzyisbored9882 Except running out of room isn’t a problem anywhere (except maybe a few islands, but unless I missed the news somewhere that’s only theoretical). The entire world population could fit within the borders of the state of Texas with more than enough personal space for everyone. Focusing on Asia, Japan has a bunch of badly depopulated areas. China had whole cities it has built with no one to live in them. There’s no problem with space, and with the way things are going never will be in our lifetimes. Resources could be another problem, but the problem there is more efficiency than actual resources (increased efficiency would also reduce resource usage). You’re worrying about a problem that literally doesn’t exist except in your mind.
@lizzyisbored9882Ай бұрын
@@John-fk2ky you also need space for crops and extraction of resources, as well as public spaces like parks for a good quality of life. Plus what is the measurement of comfortable living space are we talking about? At minimum each individual should get like 400sq ft and a family of 4 needs like at least 800sqft. China and Japan have a lot of tine shoe box apartments as well. I do not think that's a good quality of life. Sure the worlds population can fit in Texas but what about crops growing, decent size housing, and public spaces!?
@originaozz5 ай бұрын
5:28 this concept of convoluted government support really discourage actual fixing of the problem. The way the husband called it "fair, but not equal" is so true. They are treating women who work as more capable, while punishing them for working full time & being a mom.
@fdsajkl766 ай бұрын
The lady in pink suggested government propaganda haha
@asfsfas24356 ай бұрын
government propaganda doesn't even work in dictatorship nation like china
@grrumakemeangry6 ай бұрын
Shes not wrong lol
@DmCNoki6 ай бұрын
Most people I know who have children are happy. Showing this is not a bad idea :o
@user-gu9yq5sj7c6 ай бұрын
When did she mention the government? Suggesting about influencers can just be with regular people and culture.
@GummyIsNotArtsy6 ай бұрын
it could be an honest tv show im sure theres parents out there who like spending time with their children
@davidigra6 ай бұрын
No need to reinvent the wheel, for a nation with a population in decline it's a matter of changing policies and creating opportunities for families. Provide childcare, care for women and subsidies for families. The hard part will be finding political consensus to implement such changes.
@milorxngo6 ай бұрын
yeah thats obviously not going to happen easier to just allow immigrants
@6ghastlyghoul96 ай бұрын
@@milorxngo politicians don't reinvest funds derived from taxes into society. they pocket them
@Chango1506 ай бұрын
No subsidies no please, we already have enough countries going bankrupt due to so much subsidy policy
@MACTEP_CHOB6 ай бұрын
@@Chango150 What is your solution ?
@Roaming7256 ай бұрын
Yeah, the issue is that old people have control over creating policies and they don't care to invest in the future that they will not be alive for.
@E.3-h2u3 күн бұрын
Children are so important for each country, I think more countries should recognize that making things like education far more accessible for all in society will benefit the country over all. My country is ranked lower than Japan in education quality but we are not far from them and our education is entirely payed by taxes, it really does a lot for people not having to choose career vs family.
@sinistercr03476 ай бұрын
13:27 as a man with a family, I can confirm. You don't want to screw up when family is on the line.
@RedLion3046 ай бұрын
Half the problem is people smashing themselves into densely populated cities because companies providing decebt salaries are sticking to said cities. Tokyo is overpopulated. Humans, like any other animal, are limited to certain environmental conditions to do well, and a densely populated environment almost necessarily means poor conditions for human health and procreation. GET PEOPLE AND BUSINESSES OUT OF TOKYO.
@NipplesOfDestiny3 ай бұрын
They are all so respectful and well-spoken it’s hilarious 😂
@krizsz6 ай бұрын
That dude that wanted 5 daughters, will probably have to settle for some sort of a anime bodypillow xD
@SamBassComedy6 ай бұрын
i wasn't sure what gender that person was ! 🤣
@nawab2566 ай бұрын
@@SamBassComedy it was pretty obvious what his gender was, but he wasnt fooling anyone with that wig
@coveruplies6 ай бұрын
@@nawab256 that was a wig?
@nawab2566 ай бұрын
@@coveruplies bro look at that hair and look at his face. dude was like 70 with k pop silky black hair
@coveruplies6 ай бұрын
@@nawab256 I see it now....
@Gazer-x5s6 ай бұрын
This happens everywhere in the world not just in Japan, I have similar thought with them as I don't want children, my country owns me nothing.
@mia30336 ай бұрын
Not as bad as japan. Its ppl's choice to have kids or not but if its down bad to japan level the country might collapse
@alfonsjones57986 ай бұрын
13:20 this is interesting. As a man in germany, my boss would never asked me, if i want to have children or somthing like that. With close colleagues its different, but the boss oder Supervisor? Not really. I think women might experience this more often
@12himitsu126 ай бұрын
Oh please...it's not even about money, it's about women finally being able to earn their own money and not be forced to depend on men to survive, now women started to use their brains and they understand that the difference between being a mother and being a father is huge, it's no surprise many men want children, it costs them much less that it costs women...
@AD-ln2xu6 ай бұрын
Nonsense
@GothicGali6 ай бұрын
@@AD-ln2xu It’s not, this is how many women think. Additionally, men and women are not willing to be poor, or give up (generally) their freedoms for children, and this isn’t just in Japan. It’s in every developed nation.
@12himitsu126 ай бұрын
@@AD-ln2xu what part is nonsense? I could become a mother if the guy would be pregnant then gave birth and then stayed with a child home, why not? The only thing I would have to sacrifice would be a bit of attention for a kid and some money (like most men do) not my health, not my body and not my freedom.
@niqjaw50096 ай бұрын
Women have decided they want the liberty from the mindless drudgery of childrearing and do fun and interesting stuff instead like travelling and hobbies. People have learnt to put their egos aside and desist from breeding particularly in this increasingly dying.planet with catastrophic climate change previsions. One ego plus another ego less imagination equals three or more.
@tc23346 ай бұрын
The couple with the pregnant woman seem so cheerful. :)
@ando11356 ай бұрын
and in California, for a shitty studio apartment, you need to pay $1600 a month (generously low) and to even qualify you need to make 2-3x the rent, so my monthly income would have to be $4800 a month and my credit needs to be good. I really do like living my life in Japan at the moment but the problem is career advancement.
@mztokyo76306 ай бұрын
Great interview with the follow up questions to their "ideas". The girl wearing pink had a lot of good ideas to tackle the issue. All economically advanced countries have fewer children because it costs a lot of money to raise and worry about children entering prestigious universities. So sad they are so focused on just a few schools they can't take the time to enjoy their youth. I think folks were happier when they were just farmers living in a multi-generational household. It was more physically demanding, but probably more fulfilling. No trying to *keep up with the Joneses* , just plant, grow, harvest, and repeat.
@tangerinetangerine44006 ай бұрын
No one is stopping you if you want that life.
@PavltheRobot4 ай бұрын
I think a lot of young people are aware, but what are they supposed to do about it? You can't just force people to have kids 💀
@e-92273 ай бұрын
It’s an infringement on human rights. It’s also stupid because they will end up paying more for a generation with psycholohical issues because they were born by people who did not want them.
@hildegardvonbingen90923 ай бұрын
Have unprotected Sex?
@Ignisan_663 ай бұрын
When things get desperate enough... In several decades when this problem is even worse, people and nations will resort to extreme measures just to survive. It's human nature.
@aminahmad25953 ай бұрын
You people have no religion. Most religions encourage marriage and children to spread the religion. Eventually it is survival of the fittest. How genius are Japanese really. If they are going to die out the one thing ever species tries to avoid extinction 😂
@demran7 күн бұрын
While I admire Japan's technological advancements and efficient policies, their approach to social issues is deeply concerning. The rise of antisocial solutions, such as solo dining restaurants where you don't even interact with waiters, capsule hotels for one, anime/manga cafés designed for days-long isolation, 24/7 konbini culture that eliminates the need for social interaction, and virtual girlfriend/boyfriend apps that replace real relationships, may offer convenience but ultimately encourage loneliness. These innovations sacrifice community and human connection in favor of individual comfort. Japan's plummeting birth rate and shrinking population are clear signs of a deeper social crisis: isolation, compounded by economic challenges. However, economic issues alone do not explain the problem, as countries facing far worse conditions still maintain stable birth rates. Without addressing this societal detachment I fear for the worse..
@thisdudesuxlol96695 ай бұрын
0:25 bro was excited
@xRakanishu2 ай бұрын
bro wants to NUT
@Jinxiz-V6 ай бұрын
It really was interesting ! Thanks for this video !
@desktorp8 күн бұрын
Some people are very dishonest. Everyone knows Japan's culture is still based on a collective group mentality. Many younger people have bonehead modern vocabulary beat in to their heads about 'individualism' but do not actually know what it means or even want a culture based on individualism, because it's the opposite of Japanese culture. The more 'individualism' is imported to Japan, the less stable and the more dangerous it becomes. Push back against this at all costs. Do not mimic the mistakes of the West. Save Japan before it's too late.
@SweetLitzLM6 ай бұрын
You should interview more women for this topic. Their opinions are much more prevalent as they will suffer the consequences of motherhood in Japan like being misstreated, having to forfeit their career, being the sole caretaker of the kids, etc. Things that men dont think about because those are consequences only women suffer, they will have a more positive response to wanting kids than the women. But the real decision makers and the ones who more power over the population decrese issue in general are the women.
@SweetLitzLM6 ай бұрын
@GoralischeSS because women had no say about those issues before. if japan is a misogynic country now it was 10x worse before, hope it clarifies things for you. also cost of living was cheaper.
@Bonkbork6 ай бұрын
Believe it or not. As much i love Japan and their culture from outside the country, its hurts to see this country slowly entering their own stage of the US' Great Depression.
@보키더록6 ай бұрын
They already did during the bubble crisis 40 years ago.
@feylights1666 ай бұрын
It really does. I am slowly learning Japanese, and it makes me sad to think of what will happen to the country if their decline continues. And it's a complicated issue, as people should have the right to choose whether or not they want kids, but it makes me sad to think what could be lost.
@NowioFel6 ай бұрын
They will be fine, contrary to the western nations
@asdfghjjhgf6 ай бұрын
This is because a lot of the media tends to focus on the dark side of Japan. For example, this video makes it seem as if Japan's birth rate is one of the worst in the world, when in fact, Japan has the highest birth rate in East Asia, higher than that of Western countries such as Spain and Italy. However, the media only focuses on Japan's birth rate and does not pay any attention to Italy and Spain. It is not that Japan is extremely bad, just that the media is biased in its reporting.
@보키더록6 ай бұрын
@@asdfghjjhgf In your last comment regarding to Douyin, you’re also focusing on the downsides of it, you mention CCP/CPC propaganda of the Fukushima water waste, I’m Korean and Fukushima water waste is also heavily condemned in Korea media. So it is unbiased to say CCP/CPC is the only one reporting the nuclear waste water. Douyin may have lots of CCP/CPC propaganda, but it cannot be compare to KZbin where there is India propaganda, Russia propaganda, US propaganda, atheist propaganda, Christian Propaganda, Islamic propaganda, skibidi toilet, rizz video, andrew Tate, and more to come. you may be wondering, why am I mentioning this? Because you’re also focusing on the negative of it. Human being are more focus on the negative than the positive. Any media you’ve witness is definitely biased toward something and unbiased toward the beneficial of their own. There is no such thing as unbiased media. We’re all biased, just as I mention it I’m biased and everyone else is also biased.
@noble_sword6411 күн бұрын
I wonder how many interviews they have to conduct before they get enough for a full video, because it always seems like they have an unusually high number of thought, educated, well-informed answers compared to other street interviews.
@d3tuned3786 ай бұрын
It's not a crisis. The world is overpopulated. It's a "crisis" for capitalists, because that system expects infinite growth with finite resources and dwindling opportunities and quality of life for laborers.
@erickariuki68426 ай бұрын
People are living longer than before, that's the real issue
@editfazekas38542 ай бұрын
I beg to differ and to stop using platitudes. The 3rd world is overpopulated. The 2nd and the 1st world is dying out.
@d3tuned3782 ай бұрын
@@editfazekas3854 Beg all you want. The world itself is overpopulated, and the '2nd' and first world are not even close to 'dying out' and wont be. Are you a bot for corporate interests? The only people who benefit from the continued pumping out of babies are those whose bottom line is tied to infinite, unsustainable growth (IE shareholders, billionaires). Capitalism is the notion that infinite growth should be sustained within a system that has finite resources. It's inherently untenable. Degrowth is the only option, and even then it's not going to completely save us from the horrible climate future we have in store for us. Nothing is going to get the plastic out of your soft tissue or your brain. You are either an agent for the billionaires or you're incredibly uninformed.
@d3tuned3782 ай бұрын
@@editfazekas3854 In addition, that's not what platitudes are. You're using that word incorrectly.
@mitribvegetarian70426 ай бұрын
I’ve noticed after watching this video and one similar about Korea and China, that the amount of money being mentioned to raise a child seems outrageous. I’m sure if people were to be asked these same questions in other countries that they would give large amounts as well, because they are clueless. If you want your children to have everything you want them to have and private schools then yes the cost will be large, but most families don’t and raise kids on small budgets. Kids most of the time bring happiness and so much joy that’s priceless, and support and love in your old age.
@hildegardvonbingen90923 ай бұрын
People in rich countries always blame their governments or the Economy. When in reality they just want easier lifes with less responsibility.
@rdmctague11 күн бұрын
Its bonkers to me the disconnect between regular people and the people in power on this issue. Regular people accurately understand that their entire life has been financialized and the viability of their status is entirely dependent on work. Its been drilled into us since birth that we need to work for everything and the reward is a good life. People with wealth and power just see the diminishing of their status due to their own decisions to squeeze us for all we are worth. We have been sold an image of what a good life looks like and as a species we accepted that image. Fear of providing less than that for ourselves and our children is going to necessarily make people rethink their future.
@Shrey1g6 ай бұрын
France and Ireland have fertility rates of 1.83 and 1.72, respectively, despite having a much higher cost of living than Japan. Also, South Korea has a fertility rate of 0.8, despite having a lower cost of living than Japan. Japan's fertility rate is 1.3, in case you didn't know. So you can see, it's the people, not the cost of living.
@youngfew8346 ай бұрын
You have no idea what the problem is. France has a large number of immigrants. The birth rate of immigrants is only high and the birth rate of pure French is low. It is also well known that the birth rate is higher in post-poor countries. To make the low birth rate an issue of public awareness is proof that you do not know anything.
@Shrey1g6 ай бұрын
@@youngfew834 i also mentioned ireland and south korea but whatever. Why are these immigrants having kids if cost of living is so high? Can you tell me? It just proves my point that it is the people, not cost of living. I am from india where muslims have higher fertility rate than majority, i blame majortiy for that not cost of living.
@maxalbert89036 ай бұрын
@@Shrey1g I think you are right here
@PaulinaKarolina6 ай бұрын
Yeah but France has good policy regarding maternity leave etc. But in korea it doesn’t exist. once women have a baby she is loosing her job and return is really hard. Women in korea dont want to give up on their careers.
@Shrey1g6 ай бұрын
@@PaulinaKarolina Who makes the policies? Take a guess... PEOPLE(albeit those in power but still its a democracy). And btw, in Ireland, there is no exclusive policy contributing to the birth rate; it's their cultural emphasis on family that contributes to its higher fertility rate. I agree with you there that in developed countries women prefer carrer over having children.