Well, it’s big in Japan.
That is what proponents of California’s high speed rail project say when asked about the whys and wherefores of the system. In other words, if it works somewhere else it will work here. read more »
JapanBig in Japan
by Thomas Buckley 02/07/2023
Well, it’s big in Japan. That is what proponents of California’s high speed rail project say when asked about the whys and wherefores of the system. In other words, if it works somewhere else it will work here. read more » »
Subjects:
The Unexpected Future
by Joel Kotkin and Wendell Cox 08/21/2022
We are entering an unanticipated reality—an era of slow population growth and, increasingly, demographic decline that will shape our future in profound and unpredictable ways. read more » »
Subjects:
Tokyo, Osaka & Nagoya Cores: Migration Losses
by Wendell Cox 06/10/2022
As Japan fell into population decline early in the last decade, the Tokyo area (Tokyo, Kanagawa, Saitama and Chiba prefectures), in something of a paradox, experienced population increases. read more » Focusing on World Megacities: Demographia World Urban Areas, 2021
by Wendell Cox 07/29/2021
The 2021 edition of Demographia World Urban Areas includes current population estimates for the 985 identified built-up urban areas (Note 1 describes the background and methodology) with at least 500,000 population.This is a smaller number than last year, due to a methodology that rendered somewhat lower populations for some urban areas. read more » »
Here's to Next GM Revolution in Spring Hill, Tennessee
by Dale Buss 05/02/2021
Remember how states and cities breathlessly pursued Tesla’s battery “gigafactory” in 2014 and Amazon’s “HQ2” in 2018? In the 1980s, localities went after General Motors’ Saturn project with much the same ardor before the “revolutionary” initiative landed in Spring Hill, Tennessee. read more » »
Subjects:
Japan Prefectures: COVID-19 Fatality Rates and Urban Densities
by Wendell Cox 08/28/2020
Japan has done remarkably well in controlling the Covid-19 virus. The nation’s death rate per million population at 0.9, is very low by international standards and the lowest among the G-7 nations. Yet there are significant variations among the prefectures — as elsewhere — by urban densities. read more » »
Subjects:
Face Panties
by John Sanphillippo 07/17/2020
Some years ago I was enjoying another visit to Japan when I noticed ordinary people wearing face masks. It wasn’t everyone. And it wasn’t all the time. But it was common enough that no one seemed to notice or care. read more » »
Demographia World Urban Areas, 2020: Tokyo Lead Diminishing
by Wendell Cox 06/26/2020
For the first time in more than six decades the world’s second ranked built-up urban area has reached within 10% of leader Tokyo. The 2020 edition of Demographia World Urban Areas reports that Jakarta has reached a population of 34.5 million, behind Tokyo-Yokohama’s 38.0 million (Figure 1). The report can be downloaded here (Note 1). read more » »
Death Spiral Demographics: The Countries Shrinking The Fastest
by Joel Kotkin 02/02/2017
For most of recent history, the world has worried about the curse of overpopulation. But in many countries, the problem may soon be too few people, and of those, too many old ones. In 1995 only one country, Italy, had more people over 65 than under 15; today there are 30 and by 2020 that number will hit 35. Demographers estimate that global population growth will end this century. read more » »
How Post-Familialism Will Shape the New Asia
by Joel Kotkin 01/01/2017
Surprisingly, the modern focal point for postfamilial urbanism comes from eastern Asia, where family traditionally exercised a powerful, even dominant influence over society. The shift toward post-familialism arose first in Japan, the region’s most economically and technologically advanced country. As early as the 1990s sociologist Muriel Jolivet unearthed a trend of growing hostility toward motherhood in her book Japan: The Childless Society? –a trend that stemmed in part from male reluctance to take responsibility for raising children. read more » »
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