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    Back to basics: Japanese swap urban lives for countryside

    As he nears retirement after a career in academia, Jun Okumura has realized that he wants something different for the next stage of his life. A resident of Tokyo for decades, he wants to exchange tarmac pavements for the feel of sand between his toes and the skyscrapers for bamboo groves with green hills as their backdrop.

    Back to basics: Japanese swap urban lives for countryside
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    “I was thinking of escaping to an island south of Tokyo and setting up a hotel that catered to foreign visitors,” he said. “It would be great to be out of the city. The islands have surfing and diving, there is a marathon every year and it’s a beautiful place, but Tokyo is less than one hour away by hydrofoil,” he added.

    “It may be a dream, but it certainly appeals.” Okumura is only one of many of Japan’s urban residents who are considering exchanging the frenetic pace of life in the city for something a lot more laid back, an outlook that has been encouraged by the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Plenty of people who have been cooped up in their small apartments for weeks on end are increasingly pining for the great outdoors — particularly those whose companies have embraced the concept of working remotely.

    An annual study of 10,000 inhabitants of Tokyo and three surrounding prefectures has discovered that fully 49.8% of people want to live in the countryside in the future. The study was conducted in February, just as the coronavirus was beginning to tighten its grip on the nation, and was up sharply from the 23% of respondents hoping to move to a rural part of the country just two years previously.

    Even before the coronavirus outbreak, the national government was drawing up plans to encourage people to swap the city for the countryside and reverse the decades long trend of young people moving to urban areas in search of work. In 2018, the government announced a scheme under which residents of Tokyo could receive 3 million yen if they left the congested capital to live elsewhere.

    Nearly 9.3 million people are crammed into the 23 wards that make up central Tokyo, an area of 619 square kilometres, while the 2,188 square kilometres of the greater Tokyo metropolitan district are home to more than 36 million people.

    And while Japan’s population is in gradual decline after peaking at 127.32 million in 2010, the number of residents of Tokyo continues to rise as young people leave the rural hinterland in search of better education and employment opportunities. The strain is beginning to tell on cities’ public transportation systems, utilities, hospitals and other infrastructure. In parallel, countless villages and towns in the countryside are today made up of elderly residents, with schools closing and farmland left to go fallow because there are no young people left to work it. Asked in the most recent study why they wanted to swap the city for the countryside, nearly 55% cited “the rich natural environment,” while slightly more than 16% said they wanted to go back to the areas where their families were originally from.

    “The coronavirus has changed things, for sure,” Okumura told DW. “People now want a better quality of life, to be close to a beach or the mountains, to have space to move around in. And when you factor in the price of real estate in Tokyo, then moving out makes even more sense.”

    “A second-hand apartment in the countryside only an hour or so from Tokyo is only going to cost $40,000 or so, and as long as people are able to work from home and go into the office maybe once a week, then this is suddenly a very viable proposition,” he added. Some of the communities that previously lost their younger generations to the bright lights of Tokyo, Osaka and elsewhere are now looking to lure newcomers with attractive incentives. The town council on the island of Kuroshima, six hours by ferry off the southern island of Kyushu, is offering subsidies of 85,000 yen per person per month and also covering the cost of moving to the island. An added sweetener to the deal is a one-off payment of 300,000 yen or a cow.

    — This article has been provided by Deutsche Welle

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