Abstract
Like Singapore, Japan is projected to age rapidly. Japan is the first country in the world where more than 20% of the total population is over 65. Even as Japan adapts from western Europe and America where population ageing is more advanced up till now, it has been pioneering its own aged care policy, given the differences in sociocultural and political contexts. Of particular interest is its introduction of long‐term care insurance and its effectiveness in meeting the needs of the long‐term care of the aged and their family caregivers. In this article I seek to compare and contrast Singapore and Japan in terms of their demographic changes leading to rapid ageing, and their respective policy and program responses to a rapidly ageing population, drawing lessons from the Japanese experience.
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CITATION STYLE
Tin Ng, G. (2007). Learning from Japanese Experience in Aged Care Policy. Asian Social Work and Policy Review, 1(1), 36–51. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1753-1411.2007.00004.x
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