Section 01 — Economy
The Deflation Era Is Over
After thirty years of near-zero inflation, prices have run above the BOJ's 2% target for three and a half consecutive years. Wages are rising at a pace not seen in decades — the 2026 shunto negotiations delivered a third straight ~5% pay rise — but the Middle East conflict's energy shock is complicating the BOJ's exit from ultra-loose policy.
Fresh — GDP: Q1 2026 (Cabinet Office) · Inflation: Feb 2026 · BOJ Rate: Jun 2026 · Shunto: 2026
Source: Bank of Japan · Cabinet Office · Ministry of Finance · IMF Article IV 2026 · boj.or.jp
GDP Growth Q1 2026 / 2026 Forecast
+0.5%
Quarter-on-quarter, the strongest expansion since Q1 2025 — driven by a pickup in private consumption and a sharp acceleration in exports. The IMF's full-year 2026 forecast has been cut to just 0.8% growth, citing weaker external demand and the impact of the Middle East conflict on Japan's energy-import-dependent economy.
↔ Resilient but decelerating · Cabinet Office / IMF Apr 2026
The IMF's April 2026 Article IV assessment describes an economy that has displayed "impressive resilience" and grown above potential — but flags that a positive output gap, elevated crude oil prices from the Middle East conflict (Japan imports roughly 90% of its energy), and softer external demand are all combining to slow the pace of expansion through the remainder of 2026. Private investment and consumption are expected to stay firm regardless, supported by real wage gains as inflation eases.IMF 2026 Article IV Consultation with Japan, Apr 2026 · Bank of Japan Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices, Apr 2026
Core CPI Inflation Feb 2026
1.3%
Year-on-year, moderating after running above the BOJ's 2% target for three and a half consecutive years — the longest stretch of above-target inflation since the target was adopted. The BOJ expects inflation to reaccelerate into a 2.5–3.0% range in fiscal 2026 as Middle East-driven crude oil prices push up energy and goods costs.
↔ Moderated, but reacceleration expected · BOJ Outlook Apr 2026
For three decades, Japan's central economic problem was the opposite of most developed nations: prices that refused to rise, sapping corporate investment and wage growth in a self-reinforcing loop. That era is now widely considered over — inflation expectations have shifted, firms are routinely raising both wages and prices in tandem, and the BOJ has moved from negative rates to a 31-year-high policy rate. The open question is whether this new equilibrium proves durable once the current energy price shock fades.Bank of Japan Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices, Jan/Apr 2026 · IMF Staff Concluding Statement, Feb 2026
BOJ Policy Rate Jun 2026
1.0%
Raised to a 31-year high in June 2026 — the highest since September 1995. The BOJ paused at its April 2026 meeting, with three board members dissenting in favour of an immediate hike, as the Middle East energy shock complicated the timing. Board member Naoki Tamura has argued for gradual hikes toward a neutral rate near 2%.
▲ Highest since 1995, more hikes signalled · BOJ Jun 2026
10-Year JGB Yield
2.50%
The highest level since July 1997, as bond markets price in an extended BOJ tightening cycle. Rising long-term yields directly increase the government's own borrowing costs — the Finance Ministry raised its assumed interest rate for FY2026 debt calculations to 3.0%, up sharply from 2.0% the year before.
▲ Highest since 1997 · MOF / market data 2026
Shunto Spring Wage Negotiations 2026
+5.3%
Average pay rise from Japan's annual spring wage negotiations — the third consecutive year of roughly 5% increases, the pace the BOJ has sought for a generation as the sign that a genuine wage-price cycle has taken hold. Nominal wages are rising at a historic pace, though real wages have continued to contract as headline inflation outpaces wage growth in the near term.
▲ Third straight ~5% year · Rengo Shunto Results 2026
Unemployment Rate
~2.5%
Among the lowest in the G7 and OECD. The IMF's 2026 Article IV assessment notes labour market conditions have tightened even beyond what the output gap alone would suggest — a persistent sense of labour shortage across many industries, compounded by a slowdown in the growth of labour force participation among women and seniors.
↔ Structurally tight labour market · IMF Article IV 2026
Current Account Surplus FY2025
¥34.52T
A record high for the third consecutive year (+15% YoY), driven increasingly by returns on Japan's enormous stock of overseas investments rather than exports. Primary income — dividends and interest earned abroad — reached ¥42.28 trillion, boosted by the weak yen inflating the value of foreign earnings when converted back to yen.
▲ Third consecutive record high · MOF Balance of Payments 2026
Section 02 — Fiscal Health
The Worst Debt Load Among Developed Nations
Japan's public debt sits above 230% of GDP — the highest of any major economy, a legacy of three decades of deficit spending to fight deflation and support an ageing population. A record ¥122.3 trillion budget for FY2026 pushes debt-servicing costs to a sixth consecutive record high.
Fresh — FY2026 Budget: Dec 2025 · Debt-to-GDP: Oct 2025 · Bond Issuance Plan: FY2026
Source: Ministry of Finance Japan · Cabinet Office · mof.go.jp
⚠ Context: At ~230% of GDP, Japan's public debt is the highest among major developed economies — more than double the USA's ~123% and nearly four times Germany's 63.5%. Japan has run this level of debt for years without a bond-market crisis, largely because the vast majority is held domestically. That does not make the trajectory costless: debt-servicing alone now consumes a growing share of every new budget.
🏦 National Public Finances — FY2026 Budget
General Government Debt-to-GDP
Approximately 230% of GDP as of October 2025 — the worst ratio among developed economies. Combined central and local government bonds outstanding are projected to reach ¥1,344 trillion by the end of FY2026, nearly twice Japan's GDP.
~230%
of GDP · worst OECD
of GDP · worst OECD
FY2026 General Account Budget
¥122.3 trillion — a record high for the second consecutive year, up 6.2% year-on-year. Social security spending rose to a record ¥39.1 trillion, reflecting the ageing population; defence spending reached ¥9.0 trillion, hitting the 2% of GDP target two years ahead of schedule.
¥122.3T
record, +6.2% YoY
record, +6.2% YoY
Debt-Servicing Costs FY2026
¥31.28 trillion — the sixth consecutive record high, up 10.8% from FY2025, as the end of near-zero interest rates pushes up the cost of redeeming and servicing previously issued bonds. The Finance Ministry's assumed interest rate for these calculations rose to 3.0%, up from 2.0% the prior year.
¥31.28T
6th straight record
6th straight record
New Government Bond Issuance FY2026
¥29.58 trillion in new bonds to cover the revenue shortfall between tax receipts (~¥84 trillion forecast) and total expenditure — underscoring continued heavy reliance on debt. The bond dependency ratio (the share of the budget financed by new borrowing) is projected to ease slightly to 24.2%, from 24.9% the year before.
¥29.58T
24.2% bond dependency
24.2% bond dependency
Japan's debt has stayed sustainable for decades for reasons that don't automatically transfer to other high-debt economies: the overwhelming majority of Japanese government bonds are held domestically (largely by Japanese banks, insurers, and the BOJ itself), Japan runs a persistent current account surplus, and interest rates sat near zero for a generation, keeping debt-servicing costs manageable even at extreme debt levels. That calculus is now shifting — as the BOJ raises rates toward neutral, every percentage point adds materially to future interest costs. Separately, technical progress is real: the central government's general account is projected to post a primary surplus in FY2026 for the first time in 28 years, though the combined central-and-local primary balance remains roughly balanced rather than in genuine surplus, and Prime Minister Takaichi's government has pushed its own target of a sustained primary surplus back to fiscal 2027.Cabinet Office Economic and Fiscal Projections, Jan 2026 · Ministry of Finance Japanese Public Finance Fact Sheet, Apr 2026 · Jiji Press, Jan 22 2026
Section 04 — Governance
A Landslide, a Historic First, and Rising Press Freedom
Sanae Takaichi became Japan's first female Prime Minister in October 2025, then led the LDP to its largest postwar parliamentary majority in February 2026. Japan's press freedom ranking climbed in 2026, overtaking the United States for the first time in years.
Fresh — CPI: Feb 2026 · Press Freedom: May 2026 · Snap Election: Feb 2026
Source: Transparency International · Reporters Without Borders · Japan Cabinet Office
EDITORIAL NOTE: Governance data is presented non-partisan. Includes both institutional strengths and standing criticisms. All from internationally recognised independent bodies.
18
of 182
CPI 2025
Score: 71
CPI 2025
Score: 71
Corruption Perceptions Index 2025 — Rank 18, Score 71
Transparency International CPI 2025 (Feb 10, 2026). Japan's score has held steady at 71 for two consecutive years, against a historical average of 74 since 2001 and an all-time high of 80 in 2011 — a modestly declining long-term trend, though still firmly in the global upper tier.
↔ Steady at 71 for two years · TI Feb 2026
Transparency International CPI 2025 · transparency.org/en/countries/japan
62
of 180
Press Freedom
2026
Press Freedom
2026
Press Freedom — Overtakes the United States
RSF World Press Freedom Index 2026 (May 2026): Japan ranks 62nd, up from 66th the previous year — while the USA fell to 64th from 57th, meaning Japan now ranks ahead of the United States for the first time in recent memory. RSF still categorises Japan as "problematic," citing the kisha club press-briefing system, gender inequality in newsrooms, and political pressure on outlets as ongoing constraints, even as Japan remained the lowest-ranked G7 nation as recently as 2025.
▲ Up from 66th, now ahead of USA · RSF May 2026
Reporters Without Borders World Press Freedom Index 2026 · Japan Times, May 1 2026
RSF's central critique of Japanese press freedom centres on the "kisha club" (reporters' club) system, which regulates access to press briefings with ministers and senior officials — access is often restricted to club members only, marginalising freelance and foreign journalists and, RSF argues, encouraging a degree of self-censorship among insider reporters reluctant to jeopardise their access. Legal restrictions also bar journalists from roughly 583 zones near defence facilities under the Land Use Regulation Act. None of this amounts to the acute press freedom crises seen in authoritarian states — Japan is still classified in RSF's middle "problematic" tier, not its lower bands — but the ranking has consistently trailed other G7 democracies.RSF Japan Country Profile, 2026 · RSF Methodology for the World Press Freedom Index 2025
316
of 465
seats
Feb 2026
seats
Feb 2026
Snap Election Landslide — Largest Postwar Majority
Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi — who became Japan's first female Prime Minister on October 21, 2025 — dissolved parliament after just three months in office and called a snap election. The LDP won 316 of 465 seats in the February 8, 2026 vote, marking the first time since World War II that a single party has controlled more than two-thirds of the House of Representatives' lower chamber.
↔ Historic supermajority · Feb 2026 election results
AP News, Feb 8 2026 · The Japan Times, Feb 8 2026 · Wikipedia: Premiership of Sanae Takaichi
Section 05 — Japan in the World
Innovation Powerhouse, Demographic Warning Sign
Best innovation ranking in 15 years, home to the world's second-most-productive innovation cluster, and a healthcare system with the OECD's longest life expectancy. Set against that: the developed world's heaviest debt load and a population contraction with no clear policy fix in sight.
Fresh — GII: Sep 2025 · CPI: Feb 2026 · IMF Article IV: Apr 2026
Source: WIPO · Transparency International · IMF · OECD
EDITORIAL NOTE: Wins and gaps shown equally. All from internationally recognised independent bodies. No political judgment.
🏆 Where Japan Leads
12
of 139
GII 2025
Best since 2011
GII 2025
Best since 2011
Global Innovation Index — Best Ranking Since 2011
WIPO GII 2025: Japan climbed to 12th globally, its highest rank in 14 years, ranking 2nd worldwide in patent families and 3rd in business-performed R&D. The Tokyo–Yokohama metropolitan area was ranked the world's 2nd most productive innovation cluster, behind only Shenzhen–Hong Kong–Guangzhou.
▲ Best rank since 2011 · WIPO Sep 2025
WIPO Global Innovation Index 2025 · wipo.int/gii-ranking/en/japan
84.1
years
life exp.
OECD
life exp.
OECD
Life Expectancy — Among the World's Highest
84.1 years, 3.0 years above the OECD average, with hospital bed capacity (12.5 per 1,000) nearly three times the OECD average — a combination that gives Japan's health system genuine slack most developed nations lack, even as it strains under demographic pressure.
↔ Consistent global leader · OECD Nov 2025
OECD Health at a Glance 2025
62
of 180
Press
Freedom
Press
Freedom
Press Freedom — Overtook the USA in 2026
Climbed from 66th to 62nd in the 2026 RSF index, moving ahead of the United States (which fell to 64th) for the first time in years — a genuine improvement, even as Japan remains in RSF's middle "problematic" tier rather than its top ranks.
▲ Passed the USA · RSF May 2026
Reporters Without Borders World Press Freedom Index 2026
42.7M
tourists
2025
record
2025
record
Tourism — Record 42.7 Million Visitors
A record 42.68 million foreign tourists visited Japan in 2025, up 16% year-on-year, spending an all-time-high ¥9.5 trillion (~$60B), up 17%. A persistently weak yen has been the main driver. Inbound tourism is now Japan's second-largest export industry after automobiles — though rapid growth is straining labour supply in hospitality, and visits from China fell sharply in late 2025 amid political tensions.
▲ Record for consecutive years · Japan Tourism White Paper 2026
Japan Tourism Agency / 2026 Tourism White Paper, Jul 2026 · Japan Times
⚠ Where Japan Faces Hard Questions
230%
of GDP
debt
worst OECD
debt
worst OECD
⚠ Public Debt — The Highest of Any Developed Nation
At roughly 230% of GDP, Japan's public debt is the heaviest burden of any major economy — nearly double the USA's and almost four times Germany's. The system has avoided crisis for decades because debt is mostly domestically held, but the BOJ's rate hikes toward neutral are now pushing debt-servicing costs to record highs for six consecutive years running.
▲ Rising debt-service costs as rates normalise · MOF FY2026
Ministry of Finance Japan · IMF Article IV 2026
1.15
fertility
record
low
record
low
⚠ Demographic Decline — A Tenth Consecutive Annual Fall in Births
705,809 births in 2025 — a new record low, extending a ten-year run of consecutive annual declines. Japan's population, which peaked at 128.1 million in 2008, is projected to fall below 100 million by 2050, with the working-age population shrinking each year even as the elderly share of society climbs toward a third of the total.
▼ Tenth straight annual decline · MHLW Vital Statistics 2025
Japan Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare · Statistics Bureau of Japan
2%
GDP
defence
2 yrs early
defence
2 yrs early
Defence Spending — Accelerated to 2% of GDP Target
PM Takaichi moved up Japan's defence spending target from fiscal 2027 to the end of fiscal 2025, reaching ¥9.0 trillion (2% of GDP) two years ahead of the original schedule — part of a broader posture shift responding to regional tensions with China, Russia and North Korea, alongside a planned revision of Japan's core national security documents.
↔ Structural policy shift · Budget FY2026
Nippon.com FY2026 Budget Analysis · ICDS Estonia, Oct 2025
2nm
chips
target
FY2027
target
FY2027
Semiconductor Revival — A High-Stakes National Bet
Japan is pursuing a two-track semiconductor strategy: TSMC's Kumamoto plant (operational since 2024, ~$8-9B in Japanese subsidies, 44 supplier companies) supplies mature-node chips, while the government-backed Rapidus venture is racing to mass-produce cutting-edge 2nm chips at Hokkaido by fiscal 2027 — a feat only TSMC and Samsung have achieved — backed by roughly $12 billion in committed government funding. Success would mark a genuine return to the industry Japan once led; failure would raise hard questions about whether subsidy alone can close a decades-long technology gap.
↔ Execution risk through 2027 · METI / Rapidus 2026
CSIS Japan Semiconductor Industry Analysis, May 2026 · Rapidus Corporation, Apr 2026
🔒
Data Integrity Promise
Every number on JapanScorecard traces to an official Japanese government publication (Bank of Japan, Ministry of Finance, Cabinet Office, Ministry of Health Labour and Welfare), an internationally recognised body (IMF, OECD, WIPO, Transparency International, Reporters Without Borders), or a directly cited Budget document. We never estimate. Where data is unavailable, we say so. No political party funds or influences this site. Refreshed every 1st and 15th of every month.