Japan’s youth are now the most hostile to immigration, survey finds

AdvertisementJapanThis Week in AsiaLifestyle & CultureJapan’s youth are now the most hostile to immigration, survey finds

Observers say daily exposure to overcrowding and disruptive behaviour in urban centres has made young adults the most resistant to change

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Locals and foreign tourists crowd the streets to watch a performance in the Shibuya district of central Tokyo in August. Photo: AFP

Julian Ryall

Younger Japanese are proving to be the most resistant to immigration, defying assumptions that generational change would produce greater cosmopolitanism.

A new survey found that 70 per cent of those aged 18 to 39 expressed safety concerns about foreign workers – higher than any other demographic.

This unexpected reversal reveals a generation grappling with anxieties that cut across conventional narratives of openness and globalisation.

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The study by the Yomiuri newspaper and Waseda University’s Institute for Advanced Social Studies, published on December 2, found that nearly 60 per cent of 2,004 respondents opposed accepting more foreign workers, up from 46 per cent last year.

Yet it was the youngest cohort that drove the shift amid stagnant wages, soaring housing costs and uncertainty about the future that have made safety and stability paramount concerns for those in Japan just entering adulthood.

The rapid increase in tourists and foreign residents has brought issues

Masako Kan, cultural consultant

Masako Kan, an international cultural consultant, explained that this generation was exposed daily to the effects of rapid tourism growth and increased foreign residency in Japan’s urban centres.

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