Ishiba aims for rural revitalisation as youth, women leave


Making a difference: Yamamoto crossing the street in front of the Parliament in central Tokyo. She launched an online channel to highlight why women leave their hometowns, with one contributor comparing countryside life to the 17th-to-19th century Edo Period. — AFP

BY pledging to revitalise depopulated rural areas, Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba hopes to help his party retain its majority in the general election.

Over 40% of municipalities risk extinction, according to a recent study, because of an ageing population and an exodus of young people from the countryside – particularly women who wish to escape sexist attitudes.

AFP spoke to three women about their experiences:

Ren Yamamoto, 25, rejects the idea that women who move away should be held responsible for the situation.

“Should individual women be blamed for that?” said the web producer who lives in the mountainous Yamanashi region.

When job-hunting, Yamamoto found companies there “outdated” compared to the capital, with a culture of “asking women to step back” in roles to support their male colleagues.

“Japan is still a society where gender roles for men and women tend to be fixed”, but in places like Tokyo women “suffer less discrimination and enjoy more options”.

All for gender balance: Ishikawa says to change, Japan needs more women in politics. — AFPAll for gender balance: Ishikawa says to change, Japan needs more women in politics. — AFP

Yamamoto launched an online channel to highlight why women leave their hometowns, with one contributor comparing countryside life to the 17th-to-19th century Edo Period.

Yamamoto plans to submit testimonies from her online project to decision-makers in local and central governments, which are still heavily male-dominated.

“The image of women discussed by such a parliament is far from the reality,” she said.

The insularity of rural Japan was stifling for 37-year-old Akane Tanaka Schneider, who grew up in Niigata and now runs a small business on the outskirts of Tokyo.

“One thing I felt negative about while living in the countryside was that the community is too watchful of what you do. For example, I was told that at a certain age I should be married and have children,” she said.

But she had her own ideas about her career, and about starting a family at the “right time”.

“I was lucky to grow up in an environment where it was natural for me to make my own decisions, including periods spent abroad or working for an NGO,” she said.

“But when you look at the whole of Japan, a majority of women don’t seem to have that, and instead are pressured by social norms to get married and have children.”

One issue, debated by politicians, that interests Tanaka Schneider is that Japanese law requires married couples to share a surname – in practice, almost always the man’s.

Tanaka Schneider said she “hates” the idea of changing her name. “I would feel my life and career was being denied”.

To change, Japan needs more women in politics, says Kaori Ishikawa, 39, an assemblywoman and mother-of-two in Hitachi, a city in rural Ibaraki.

Seeking change: Tanaka Schneider walking with her dogs at a park in Ome city, the western portion of the Tokyo Metropolis. The insularity of rural Japan was stifling for Tanaka Schneider, who grew up in Niigata and now runs a small business on the outskirts of Tokyo. — AFPSeeking change: Tanaka Schneider walking with her dogs at a park in Ome city, the western portion of the Tokyo Metropolis. The insularity of rural Japan was stifling for Tanaka Schneider, who grew up in Niigata and now runs a small business on the outskirts of Tokyo. — AFP

Ishikawa was brought up there but attended high school in the more urban next-door region, then college in Tokyo, which had more job opportunities after graduation.

After marrying, she returned to Hitachi, and her father encouraged her to get involved in politics.

“Hitachi City is calling for women to raise children here, but I had to ask: are the real voices of young mothers reaching policymakers?” she said.

Ishikawa was elected last year as the youngest of 24 local assembly members who are “mostly older men”, like lawmakers in the national parliament.

“Many women feel that child-rearing is something negative, something that would hinder them when pursuing a career with their colleagues promoted instead,” she said.

“But you learn a lot from raising children, sometimes more than from work. It is a wonderful experience, but it’s not seen that way in Japan these days.”

Japan has the world’s oldest population after Monaco, and Ishiba has called the low birth rate a “quiet emergency”, pledging measures like more flexible working hours.

Last year, the population of women in their 20s fell by over 3% in 13 of Japan’s 47 regions, while for men that age, just three regions saw the same decline, data from NLI Research Institute’s Kanako Amano shows.

But for younger generations in particular, “conventional measures to support child-rearing are not enough to convince them to stay in their native communities”, said Keiko Kaizuma, a gender studies professor at Iwate University.

Instead companies need to strive for real gender equality, including equal opportunities for promotion, she said.

Toru Nakazato, an economist and associate professor at Sophia University, added that one problem within Japan’s business world is the “seniority system where you are expected to build your career inside one company”.

Changing that would “make it easier for women to return to the job market without giving up their whole career”, he said. — AFP

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