Household Debt and Aging in Japan

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aging
borrowing
debt
households
housing
Japan
liabilities
loans
retirement
Economics

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Abstract

In this paper, we analyze the borrowing behavior of Japanese households in comparison to the other Group of Seven (G7) countries and also broken down by the age group of the household head. We find that pre-retirement households (households with a head in the 50-59 age group) in Japan do not have inordinate amounts of debt and that their financial health is satisfactory. However, we also find that households with a head in the 30-39 age group have shown a sharp increase in debt holdings in recent years, due partly to the fact that tax breaks for housing purchase, reforms in the housing loan market since the early 2000s, and expansionary monetary policy enabled Japanese households to purchase housing at a younger age than they could previously. We therefore need to monitor the borrowing behavior of this cohort over time as the Bank of Japan normalizes its monetary policy, especially since households have become more vulnerable to rising interest rates as the share of households who have chosen variable-rate housing loans has increased in recent years.

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2019-05-02

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The published version of this working paper may be found in the 2020 publication, Remaking Retirement: Debt in an Aging Economy (https://pensionresearchcouncil.wharton.upenn.edu/remaking-retirement-debt-in-an-aging-economy/).

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