Abe seeks 'bold proposals' to raise Japan's birthrate
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Tokyo
PRIME Minister Shinzo Abe has ordered his new minister for demographic issues to come up with "bold proposals" for raising Japan's birthrate. His aim: stem a slide in the labour force to drive production and fund the retirement of the elderly.
The working-age population in Asia's second-biggest economy could shrink 40 per cent in the next 45 years, while the number of elderly balloons in a country with one of the world's longest life expectancies. Mr Abe last month made arresting the decline a priority, announcing a new plan that calls for stabilising the population at 100 million in half a century from 127 million now. Here are some measures Mr Abe's new minister, Katsunobu Kato, could introduce to slow the downward spiral.
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