• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Japan’s Spooky “Witch Houses”: What’s Behind This Rapidly Growing Phenomenon?

February 23, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

We’re pretty used, here in the West, to the “national housing crisis”, meaning too few houses being available. In Japan, however, they have the opposite problem: millions of akiya – empty and abandoned houses, strewn across the country, with virtually no hope of occupation.

Sometimes called “witch houses”, these buildings are often ramshackle and awkward. Many are extremely rural – less than one in ten Japanese people live outside of a city, leaving the houses of those who left their farmlands and countryside standing empty.

Advertisement

“So many empty houses […] [are] a further deterrent, because people don’t want to live in a terminal village surrounded by ‘ghost houses,’” Chris McMorran, an associate professor in the department of Japanese studies at the National University of Singapore, told Insider back in 2021. Plus, he explained, “there’s still a resistance to repopulate the countryside because […] the lack of accessibility to basic amenities like hospitals and convenience stores puts people off.”

Today – or at least, five years ago, when the last government survey was carried out – there are roughly 8.5 million of these akiya in the country. Depending on which region you’re in, the phenomenon is even more stark: in rural Wakayama, for example, as many as one in five houses are abandoned.

It’s not a new problem: the phenomenon first arose in the post-war period of the 1950s, when Japanese urbanization and industrialization skyrocketed. “Prewar houses were made to last, with the expectation that they would be the home to a family for several generations,” explains Richard Lloyd Parry, The Times’ Asia editor, in a recent report on the phenomenon. “[But] after aerial bombing laid waste to the cities, the priority was to provide housing in quantity, and quality was neglected.”

As a result, new homes in Japan started to be seen as far more temporary than before – expected to last only a handful of decades at most. Homes do not keep their value, let alone increase with age: the overwhelming majority of Japanese people now prefer to buy a newly-built house rather than a pre-owned one, and once a home reaches more than 10 or 15 years old, it could literally be worth less than nothing.

Advertisement

“In Japan, a new home is like a new car, which loses much of its value as soon as it is driven out of the showroom,” writes Parry. “There are streets in which almost every house has been abandoned; there are three in the little cul-de-sac in which I live in western Tokyo.”

Some houses are abandoned when their occupants age out of them. Japan has, by some measures, the oldest population of any country in the world, with close to one in three citizens being over the age of 65. As these people reach old age, many leave their family homes in favor of smaller, more accessible housing; when a homeowner dies, the stigma of their demise can make a home literally unsellable.

And massively compounding this problem is Japan’s infamously low birth rate – a trend which began in the 1970s and has steadily continued to this day. Indeed, in 2022 fewer than 800,000 babies were born in the country of more than 125 million, and the population has shrunk every year since 2009. 

All in all, the number of these abandoned buildings is only set to increase. Thanks to a sticky combination of Japan’s property rights laws, lost or untraceable house owners, and economic and cultural barriers, even bulldozing the akiya can be incredibly difficult, and Japanese economic thinktank Nomura Research Institute estimates that a third of the nation’s houses will be uninhabited by 2038.

Advertisement

In short, McMorran concludes, the outlook is bleak.

“This will only get worse,” he told Insider. “The core of the problem is there aren’t enough people to go around in Japan.”

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Soccer – Al Shehri on target against Oman as Saudis keep pace with Socceroos
  2. Japan upgrades Q2 GDP on stronger business spending
  3. Pianist Beisembayev ‘on cloud nine’ after winning Leeds competition
  4. Czech PM Babis denies any wrongdoing after report says he used offshore structures

Source Link: Japan's Spooky "Witch Houses": What's Behind This Rapidly Growing Phenomenon?

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • DNA From Greenland Sled Dogs – Maybe The World’s Oldest Breed – Reveals 1,000 Years Of Arctic History
  • Why Doesn’t Moonrise Shift By The Same Amount Each Night?
  • Moa De-Extinction, Fashionable Chimps, And Robot Surgery – No Human Required
  • “Human”: Powerful New Images Mark The Most Scientifically Accurate “Hyper-Real 3D Models Of Human Species Ever”
  • Did We Accidentally Leave Life On The Moon In 2019 – And Could We Revive It?
  • 1.8 Million Years Ago, Two Extinct Humans Had One Of The Gnarliest Deaths In History
  • “Powerful Image” Of One Of The World’s Rarest Tigers Exposes The Real Danger In Taman Negara
  • Evolution, Domestication, And A Lot Of Very Good Boys: How Wolves Became Dogs
  • Why Do Orcas Have White Spots Near Their Eyes?
  • Tomb Of First King Of Ancient Maya City Discovered In Belize
  • The Real Reason The Tip Of Your Tape Measure Wiggles Like That
  • The “Haunting” Last Message From NASA’s Opportunity Rover, Sent From Inside A Planet-Wide Storm
  • Adorable Video Proves Not All Gorillas Hate The Rain. It Might Even Win One A Mate
  • 5,000-Year-Old Rock Art May Show One Of Ancient Egypt’s First Rulers
  • Alzheimer’s-Linked Protein Levels “20 Times Higher” In Newborn Babies – What Does This Mean?
  • Americans Were Asked If They Thought Civil War Was Coming. The Results Were Unexpected
  • Voyager 1 & 2 Could Be Detected From Almost A Light-Year Away With Our Current Technology
  • Dams Have Nudged Earth’s Poles By Over 1 Meter In The Past 200 Years
  • This Sugar Could Be A Cure For Male Pattern Baldness – And It’s Been In Our Bodies All Along
  • “Cosmic Immigrants”: Daytime Star Seen In 1604 May Be An “Alien Type Ia Supernova”
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version