Source Notes
Japan Geopolitical Profile Source Notes
An intermediate note for organizing research material, evidence links, issue structure, and inclusion decisions before the reader-facing article is written.
Japan Geopolitical Profile Source Notes
Scope
This profile covers Japan as a country profile for news reading. The article focuses on demographic decline, local contraction, fiscal strain, the U.S. alliance, China, North Korea, Russia, defence spending, economic security, semiconductors, interest-rate normalization, and daily-life pressure.
Source Map
Primary sources
- Prime Minister’s Office of Japan Confirmed the current prime minister and the government’s “strong Japanese economy” framing.
- Statistics Bureau of Japan, Population Estimates Confirmed the 1 October 2024 population estimate, the share of people aged 65 or older, prefectural concentration, and the rise in foreign residents.
- Ministry of Finance, FY2026 budget Confirmed the FY2026 budget enactment and the supplemental budget, which show fiscal management through repeated rounds.
- Ministry of Defense, Defense of Japan 2025 Used for the current security picture covering China, North Korea, and Russia.
- Ministry of Defense, Defence budget Used to show that defence spending is an implementation problem across equipment, personnel, and operations.
- Bank of Japan Used to confirm the June 2026 policy setting and the normalization of the policy rate.
- Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, Semiconductor supply assurance Used to show that semiconductor policy is a portfolio of supply-assurance and project-level measures.
Authoritative data
- The Statistics Bureau, Ministry of Finance, Bank of Japan, METI, and MOD pages above carry the core numerical and institutional claims in the article.
Secondary context
- Brief news coverage can help with political timing, but the article did not need it for the main claims, so it stayed secondary.
Evidence Notes
- Demographic decline and aging were used as the main axis for local contraction, labor shortages, care pressure, and fiscal rigidity.
- The prime minister’s office page was used to anchor the current political center and the economic framing.
- Defence and foreign-policy pages were used to support the combined security picture around China, North Korea, and Russia.
- The Bank of Japan page was used to support the move away from a zero-rate environment.
- The METI semiconductor page was used to show that economic security is an operational system, not a slogan.
Rejected or Downgraded Sources
- Social media commentary and partisan blogs were rejected because they are too fast-moving and not primary evidence.
- Single-event news explainers were downgraded when a government source or statistical source already covered the same point.
- Regional deep dives into prefectural migration and municipal finance were relevant, but the article stayed at the country-profile level.
Open Questions
- How quickly will the coalition, opposition, and bureaucracy adapt to higher interest rates and rising social spending?
- Can defence procurement, personnel, and ammunition keep pace with the budget line?
- Can local governments absorb foreign-resident growth without turning the debate into a simple security-versus-labor binary?