The Japanese dilemma
THE WEEK India|February 11, 2024
The child follows the moving object with its eyes. The girl sashays on the catwalk, smiles, then pouts.
Anita Pratap
The Japanese dilemma

The child and girl are not human. They are robots made in Japan and they demonstrate the nation’s way of innovating out of crises.

Japan has the world’s fastest ageing society— one-third of its population are over 65 years old. Simultaneously, decreasing birth rate is creating massive labour shortages. Japan’s solution to this double whammy is evident in a statistic: it has the world’s highest number of robots. The void caused by ageing and unborn Japanese is being filled by AI, robots and avatars. Japan already has robots, androids and humanoids in hospitals, factories, schools, security services, and even outer space. It “employs” 2.5 lakh industrial robotic workers, set to increase to 10 lakh in a decade. All Japanese corporate giants manufacture robots and they dominate the international market.

This story is from the February 11, 2024 edition of THE WEEK India.

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This story is from the February 11, 2024 edition of THE WEEK India.

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