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IndiaSports4 days ago

Why anti-foreigner sentiment is growing in Japan

Japan is seeing increasing numbers of foreigners due to demographic challenges such as population decline and aging workforce, leading to higher demand for foreign labor and tourism. Despite this, the government has not formally recognized Japan as an immigration society and has been hesitant to implement policies for immigrant integration. A recent survey indicates that most Japanese citizens support stricter regulations on foreign land ownership and expect foreigners to adhere to local norms, with notable generational differences in attitudes.

Japan is experiencing historically high numbers of foreigners. Its population is shrinking, and its workforce is ageing, driving foreign labour to historic levels .

In addition, the number of international tourists has also reached record highs , reshaping everyday life across the country. In fact, Japan now rivals, and sometimes outstrips, Bali as Australians’ favourite holiday destination .

Yet, despite the expansion of channels for migrant labour and settlement over the past two decades, successive governments have avoided describing the country as an immigration society. They have also been reluctant to adopt broader frameworks for immigrant integration and social inclusion.

However, given the recent surge, questions about foreigners have moved from a policy footnote to a genuinely contested issue. So what do the Japanese people really think?

Generational differences

A nationally representative survey of 1,500 Japanese adults was conducted immediately after the lower house election in February. It revealed striking findings on how the Japanese public views foreigners.

Nearly two-thirds of respondents support both tighter regulations on foreign land purchases and the expectation that foreigners follow Japanese rules and customs. These restrictive views hold across gender, education and income groups. The major exception is age: younger generations tend to express more tolerant views toward foreigners.

The recent influx of foreigners – as workers and tourists – appears to be prompting a change in attitude among Japanese people.

The 2025 upper house election marked a turning point. Sanseito, a nationalist party that made immigration restriction its central platform, achieved a strong result , claiming 14 seats on a “Japanese first” platform.

This result signalled that explicitly anti-immigrant positions could attract meaningful public support. This in turn placed pressure on mainstream parties to address the issue more directly.

The fringe far-right Sanseito party emerged as one of the biggest winners in Japan's upper house election, gaining support with warnings of a 'silent invasion' of immigrants, and pledged for tax cuts and welfare spending https://t.co/WSb0YB4pBa

— Reuters (@Reuters) July 21, 2025

That momentum carried into the 2026 lower house election. The Liberal Democratic Party, under Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, won a landslide victory while tightening its stance on immigration policies. This included raising the requirements for permanent residency and naturalisation, and tightening regulations on foreign land purchases.

Against this political backdrop, understanding how Japanese citizens view foreigners and what identities and values shape those views has become increasingly important.

The post-election survey provides timely evidence on these questions.

My analysis of the data finds a broad consensus on foreigners among most demographics. When asked whether Japan should strengthen regulations on land purchases by foreign nationals and foreign capital, 66.5% of respondents either agreed or somewhat agreed.

When asked whether foreign nationals should place the highest priority on following Japanese rules, etiquette and customs, 62.9% agreed or somewhat agreed. Less than 7% disagree on either item.

It is notable these numbers hold across demographic groups. University and high school graduates express similarly restrictive views; men and women hold nearly identical attitudes; and higher-income respondents are no more tolerant than those on lower incomes.

However, as mentioned, the one important exception to this consensus is age. Younger Japanese are measurably more tolerant of foreigners than their older counterparts. This suggests attitudes toward foreigners in Japan may be slowly shifting.

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Party politics

Party support does structure anti-foreigner attitudes to some degree. Sanseito voters record the most restrictive views on both questions. Centrist Reform Alliance voters are the least restrictive. However, party supporters differ only in the intensity of restrictive attitudes, not whether they endorse them.

The survey also included questions measuring traditional values, which capture deference to authority and social norms, and authoritarian values , which capture acceptance of force and coercion.

Traditional values show little variation by age, gender, education or income. In contrast, authoritarian values vary by age, with young people actually showing more authoritarian values. This resonates with a survey of junior high school students in the Tokyo metropolitan area, where the proportion agreeing that “people who break the rules should be punished strictly” rose from 59% in 2018 to 79% in 2025.

At the same time, Liberal Democratic Party voters score highest on both measures. This is consistent with the party’s longstanding position as the vehicle of conservative values in postwar Japanese politics.

Both traditional and authoritarian values correlate significantly with anti-for…

Read the full article at Scroll.in
Source document: Nationally Representative Survey of 1,500 Japanese Adults

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Scroll.inIndependentCenter4 days ago
Why anti-foreigner sentiment is growing in Japan

Japan is seeing increasing numbers of foreigners due to demographic challenges such as population decline and aging workforce, leading to higher demand for foreign labor and tourism. Despite this, the government has not formally recognized Japan as an immigration society and has been hesitant to implement policies for immigrant integration. A recent survey indicates that most Japanese citizens support stricter regulations on foreign land ownership and expect foreigners to adhere to local norms, with notable generational differences in attitudes.

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual data and survey results without overtly favoring any political perspective. It discusses societal trends and public opinion neutrally, avoiding loaded language or biased interpretation.

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  • studyNationally Representative Survey of 1,500 Japanese Adults