Why Japan Is The Perfect Place To Turn 50
The Straits Times|January 06, 2025
A significant birthday feels less so in a country that has become a global pioneer of ageing – for better and for worse.
Leo Lewis

So. A big, round-numbered and menacing birthday coming up in a few weeks. Not to give too much away, but in the month I was born, Momoe Yamaguchi's Fuyu no Iro was electrifying the charts, Terror Of Mechagodzilla was about to hit cinemas and Okinawa was busying itself with last-minute preparations for Expo '75.

There are various ways to put this sombre milestone in context. I am a year younger than Hello Kitty, a decade younger than the Shinkansen bullet train and 100,000 years younger than Mount Fuji. All of those are still going strong, I suppose, although none are troubled by high cholesterol, resting-rate ruefulness or the ever-louder clicking from the mileometer of missed opportunities.

But then I remember, more cheerfully, that this birthday will be taking place in creaking, ageing Japan – a land where grey is the new black, lumbago is the new "Lambada" and 50 is not only the new 20, but more or less the median age.

Japan's candle-at-both-ends demographics put it on the global front line of both care home citizenship and youth-erosion. In a crisis now simply referred to by both the public and private sector as "the 2025 problem", the giant, eight million-strong generation of postwar baby boomers born between 1947 and 1949 have moved from the category of merely "elderly" to "advanced elderly".

This story is from the January 06, 2025 edition of The Straits Times.

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This story is from the January 06, 2025 edition of The Straits Times.

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