由第一段的最后一句“By 2050 thepopulation is projected to drop to 95 million. "和下文中的“In thecountryside the elderly are left behind while the youngergeneration tend to move to the cities.”可以推测出这里的“decline”与上文中的“drop”都是下降的意思。10.A推理判断题。由第三段的第二句...
JapanesePopulationProjectionsTable2Numberandrateofbirths,deathsandnaturalincrease(Japanesepopulation):Medium-fertility(medium-mortality)projection(66) JapanesePopulationProjectionsFigure1ActualandprojectedJapanesepopulation:Medium-,high-,andlow-fertility(medium-mortality)projections(67) JapanesePopulationProjectionsFigure2Tr...
The median age of the population in Japan has steadily been increasing since 1950 and is projected to be around 47.7 years old in 2020. As of 2021, the median age of Japan is the second highest in the world, behind the Principality of Monaco. The elderly in Japan An improved quality ...
Rising old people + falling babies = population shrinkage. If Japan doesn't act quick it will lose 20 million people by 2050.
In 2050, 39% of the Japanese population is projected to be aged 65years or older, compared to 23% of the Swedish population. The Swedish ordinary housing stock was markedly older than the Japanese housing stock, with almost 80% of the dwellings built before 1980, while in Japan about 65%...
Fast. By 2050, the global population of those age 65 and older is projected to nearly double to 1.6 billion. This global graying has given birth to a new phrase: “super-aging.” A nation is said to be super-aged when more than 1 in 5 of its people are 65 and older. advertisement...
That system is already strained by the demands of an aging populace-23 % of the Japanese population is aged 65 years or older, a proportion that is projected to grow to 40% by 2050-and by injuries associated with recent natural disasters, such as the March 2011 earthquake 1. What is ...
[220] The Japanese population is rapidly aging as a result of a post–World War II baby boom followed by a decrease in birth rates.[221] As of 2019 over 20 percent of the population is over 65, and this is projected to rise to one in three by 2030.[222] The changes in ...
The Japanese population is rapidly aging as a result of a post–World War II baby boom followed by a decrease in birth rates. In 2009, about 22.7 percent of the population was over 65, by 2050 almost 40 percent of the population will be aged 65 and over, as projected in December 2006...
Advertisement Japan’s population of more than 125 million is projected to fall by about 30% to 87 million by 2070, with four out of every 10 people at age 65 or older. A shrinking and aging population has big implications for the economy and for national security as the c...