Japan’s Average Life Expectancy Continues to Fall in 2022
13:36 JST, July 29, 2023
TOKYO (Jiji Press) — The average life expectancy fell for both Japanese men and women for the second consecutive year in 2022, a health ministry survey showed Friday.
The average life expectancy last declined for two years in a row in 2010 and 2011 for both sexes.
In 2022, men’s average life expectancy fell 0.42 year from 2021 to 81.05 years, and that of women dropped 0.49 year to 87.09 years. The drops were “largely due to the COVID-19 pandemic,” a ministry official said.
According to the ministry, the reported number of people who died after getting infected with the novel coronavirus rose to 47,635 in 2022 from 16,766 in 2021.
The COVID-19 pandemic is seen to have shortened the average life expectancy in 2022 by 0.12 year for men and 0.13 year for women, larger than 0.10 year and 0.07 year, respectively, in 2021.
The average life expectancy is the number of years a baby born in a given year is expected to live on the assumption that the death rate for each age group remains unchanged.
Until 2020, the average life expectancy had hit a record high for nine straight years for men and for eight years in a row for women.
"Society" POPULAR ARTICLE
-
Miho Nakayama, Japanese Actress and Singer, Found Dead at Her Tokyo Residence; She was 54 (UPDATE 1)
-
Risk of Nuclear Weapons Being Used Greater Than Ever; Support Growing in Russia As Ukraine War Continues
-
Overtourism Grows as Snow Cap Appears on Mt. Fuji; Local Municipalities Hard Pressed to Establish Countermeasures
-
Central Tokyo Observes 1st Snow of Season; 25 Days Earlier than Last Winter
-
Japan Star Miho Nakayama’s Death Unlikely Caused by Foul Play; Tokyo Police Make Conclusion After Autopsy (UPDATE 1)
JN ACCESS RANKING
- Japan’s Kansai Economic Delegation Meets China Vice Premier, Confirm Cooperation; China Called to Expand Domestic Demand
- Yomiuri Stock Index to Launch in March; 333 Companies to be Equally Weighted
- China to Test Mine for Rare Metals Off Japan Island; Japan Lagging in Technologies Needed for Extraction
- Miho Nakayama, Japanese Actress and Singer, Found Dead at Her Tokyo Residence; She was 54 (UPDATE 1)
- Risk of Nuclear Weapons Being Used Greater Than Ever; Support Growing in Russia As Ukraine War Continues