Japan Immigration News

Japan to launch broad review of immigration policies amid rise in foreign nationals

Release Date
2025-08-29
Media
Japan Times
Summary
Japan is set to fundamentally review its immigration policy amid a rapid rise in foreign residents, aiming to prevent social division and ensure long-term stability. A report released by Justice Minister Keisuke Suzuki outlines key concerns and proposed reforms:

Key Points:

Foreign resident numbers are rising rapidly, now at 2.82% of the population, and could reach 10.8% by 2070—possibly sooner due to declining birthrates.

A new government task force will survey the societal impact and help shape future policies.

Caps on foreign admissions may be introduced if social friction exceeds tolerable levels.

The report identifies seven key areas for policy discussion: economic growth, industrial policy, labor, taxes/social security, daily life, public safety, and immigration control.

It stresses the need for strategic, unified, long-term planning, rather than Japan’s current ad hoc measures.

Policy Proposals:

Develop multiple economic scenarios based on different levels of foreign intake.

Clarify the roles of national and local governments.

Launch social integration programs to reduce friction in communities.

Introduce electronic travel authorization by 2028.

Speed up asylum processing to six months by 2030.

Expand deportation capacity and tighten enforcement against illegal work.

Consider limits on lower-skilled visa categories under a new system in fiscal 2027.

Improve coordination between the Immigration Services Agency and Justice Ministry on residency and naturalization.

The report concludes that Japan must balance public safety with the goal of achieving true coexistence with foreign nationals as they grow to comprise a significant share of the population.
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