Aging population hits record high in Japan

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The Japanese government said Sunday that population of elders aged above 65 hit a record high at 31.86 million as of Sunday, a 1.12 million increase from a year earlier, marking that one in four people in the country are aged over 65, according local media.

The figure was up 0.9 percent to 25 percent and was based on births and deaths registered since a census in 2010, said Japan's Kyodo News, quoting the internal affairs ministry.

The ministry said in a demographic estimate that the record high figure was trigger by the baby boom after the World War II.

According to Japan's National Institute of Population and Social Security Research, it will be one in three people in Japan to be aged above 65 by the year of 2035, said Kyodo.

The number of male aged over 65 stood at 13.69 million, about 22.1 percent of the overall male population, while 18.18 million female aged over 65, 27.8 of the total female population, said the report.

It also said that of all the population aged over 65, about 27. 9 percent of men and 13.2 percent of women remained part of the labor force.