The Daily Manila Shimbun

 

40% of households expected to be single-person ones in 2040

January 13, 2018



Tokyo- One-person households in Japan are seen increasing to 19.94 million in 2040, accounting for nearly 40 percent of all households, a government-affiliated research institute said Friday.

The number of people aged 65 or over who are living alone is forecast to total 8.96 million in 2040, accounting for 45 percent of all those living on their own, due to an increase in people in the age group who have never married, according to the National Institute of Population and Social Security Research , an affiliate of the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry.

"Since the 1980s, it is not uncommon for people to remain unmarried," an official at the institute said, adding, "These people will get old by around 2040, leading to a rise in the rate of elderly people living alone."

The research institute updates household estimates every five years. The latest estimates are based on the 2015 census.

The total number of households is projected to increase from 53.33 million in 2015 to 54.19 million in 2023, but is then estimated to start falling and come to 50.76 million in 2040.

The proportion of one-person households in the total is estimated to jump from 34.5 percent in 2015 to 39.3 percent in 2040.

The proportion of households comprising married couples only is expected to rise from 20.2 percent to 21.1 percent, and that of single-parent families is forecast to climb from 8.9 percent to 9.7 percent.

By contrast, the proportion of families with both parents and one or more children is expected to fall from 26.9 percent to 23.3 percent. Such families accounted for over 40 percent in 1980. Jiji Press