Jan. 3 (UPI) -- Japan is offering families who live in Tokyo 1 million yen ($7,500) per child to move out of the capital and into other towns and villages.
The new offer represents an increase of over 300% from the old offer of 300,000 yen. It will be introduced in April as officials try to revive areas with declining birthrates and aging populations.
The program is part of Japan's Infrastructure Development Plan for a Digital Garden City Nation, which is aimed at regional revitalization through the promotion of relocation to rural areas by means of digitization.
Those moving also have to meet one of three conditions: employment at a small or midsize company in the area they relocate to, continuing their pre-relocation work via the Internet or starting a business in their new area of residence.
According to Nikkei Asia, relocation support was provided to 1,184 families in fiscal 2021, rising from 290 in 2020 and 71 in 2019. Officials hope that the program will help reduce pressure on public services in Tokyo, which has a population of 35 million.
The government is hoping 10,000 people will have moved from Tokyo to rural areas by 2027, it added.
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That's fascinating. I haven't heard about government initiatives to repopulate the countryside.
There was another program a few months ago where the Japanese state was selling rural abandoned houses for less than $1k USD
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They're called Akiya houses, and have been abandoned for a while. They're usually falling apart and are a century or more old. My friend knew someone who got an Akiya house for around $1k in Okayama prefecture and it was missing an entire wall. Half the house had to get knocked down and renovated so it might have been more efficient to just buy a normal house
Everyone is gangsta about living in the Japanese countryside until the first mukade shows up.
If you're interested, David Fishman (who lives in China and writes very interesting articles about the energy sector) has written about China's New Countryside program, which OP's article reminded me of. The New Countryside program is also based on rural revitalisation programs developed in Vietnam, I've read elsewhere.
https://crossingtheriver.substack.com/p/exploring-the-reality-of-chinas-new
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Yeah looks interesting, thanks