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Demography in disguise: Comments on "Demographic challenges and economic stagnation in Japan" by Takeo Hoshi (2026)

Author

Listed:
  • Mori, Tomoya

Abstract

Hoshi (2026) argues that population decline accounts for only a small share of Japan's slowdown; that Tokyo's overconcentration reflects declining gross mobility, not increased one-way migration; that women's low gross migration reflects ``relative immobility''; that declining mobility is a greater demographic challenge than population decline; and that the challenge is therefore more institutional than demographic. Each of these readings inverts on closer examination. Growth accounting treats population and productivity as independent, ignoring the channels through which demographic decline shapes productivity: structural transformation, reallocation, and agglomeration. Net concentration in the Tokyo Metropolitan Area has accelerated since 2010; per-capita migration rates have risen across all age groups, the gross-volume decline reflecting the shrinking young cohort. Women flow into Tokyo more strongly than men, stay longer once there, and leave non-metropolitan regions more strongly: directional, not relative, immobility. Hoshi's prescriptions---raise mobility, abandon regional retention, focus on productivity---amount to describing a healthier Japan rather than curing the present one---a description unimpeachable as advice but silent on why Japan is where it is, or how to move it elsewhere.

Suggested Citation

  • Mori, Tomoya, 2026. "Demography in disguise: Comments on "Demographic challenges and economic stagnation in Japan" by Takeo Hoshi (2026)," MPRA Paper 128962, University Library of Munich, Germany.
  • Handle: RePEc:pra:mprapa:128962
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    JEL classification:

    • J11 - Labor and Demographic Economics - - Demographic Economics - - - Demographic Trends, Macroeconomic Effects, and Forecasts
    • J61 - Labor and Demographic Economics - - Mobility, Unemployment, Vacancies, and Immigrant Workers - - - Geographic Labor Mobility; Immigrant Workers
    • O47 - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth - - Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity - - - Empirical Studies of Economic Growth; Aggregate Productivity; Cross-Country Output Convergence
    • R11 - Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics - - General Regional Economics - - - Regional Economic Activity: Growth, Development, Environmental Issues, and Changes
    • R23 - Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics - - Household Analysis - - - Regional Migration; Regional Labor Markets; Population

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