In 2024, the number of children born in Japan fell to 720,988, marking the ninth consecutive year of low records, while Portugal recorded a total of 84,631 babies, 1,133 fewer newborns than the previous year (85,764).
Births decreased in all of Japan’s 47 prefectures compared to 2023, declining at a faster pace than government projections and showing no signs of abating. Following the drop recorded in 2024, the number of births in Portugal grew again in the first quarter of this year, but it still remains uncertain whether these figures can be maintained.
In partnership with 4 Day Week Global, the Portuguese government launched a report including 41 Portuguese companies that shortened the working week, 21 of which coordinated the start of a six-month trial in June 2023. As a result, work exhaustion decreased by 19 percent, challenges maintaining work-life balance dropped from 46 percent to 8 percent, and a vast majority of employees would only return to a 5-day week if they received a pay rise.
The Azorean government has announced plans to begin testing the four-day workweek in the public sector this year, claiming it will increase productivity through a sense of responsibility, and could lead to improvements in the private sector.
In the Regional Government programme (PSD/CDS-PP/PPM), approved in March by the Azorean parliament, the executive indicates that it seeks to create a “pilot project for the four-day workweek/telework (also extendable to the private sector), always in common agreement with the worker and the employer, to better reconcile their professional life with their personal and family life”.
A similar announcement was made by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government, which introduced the four-day work week on 1 April, requiring companies to offer flexible work options for employees with young children, such as reduced working hours and remote work.
“We will continue to review work styles flexibility to ensure that women do not have to sacrifice their careers due to childbirth or child-rearing”, Yuriko Koike, Governor of Tokyo, said at the time of the announcement.
Currently, the Tokyo Government uses a flexitime system that allows employees to add an extra day off every four weeks, and this will rise so that staff can add an extra day off per week. The increasing pressure from the government to allow more flexibility for working parents comes amid growing concerns over Japan’s ageing population.
Related article:
While the idea of a four-day workweek is appealing on the surface, it completely misses the root cause behind falling birthrates, both in Portugal, Japan, and worldwide.
The problem is not about the number of workdays. It is about a profound shift in the dynamics between men and women.
Family today is no longer built out of necessity, it must be built on meaning and mutual growth.
Men are no longer just providers. Women are no longer compelled to bear children because "it’s time." Parenthood today must come from genuine desire and deep emotional partnership, not from incentives or extra free time.
We are witnessing a transition from an androcentric world to a human-centric one.
Few recognize it, but unless we address it, no number of working hours or bonuses will reverse the trend.
The real path forward?
We must rethink what family means.
We must empower men to be true life partners, and women to choose motherhood freely, joyfully, without social pressure.
We must make reproductive technologies affordable and accessible to all. We must suport solo parenthood.
And most importantly, we must reframe how we value children, not as a disturbance to career, study, or life, not as a financial or time-consuming burden, but as an immense source of energy.
And yes, in this reframed perception of children within our society, the male-designed games of "business" and "success" start to look truly absurd.
Until we address these deep roots, reforms like a four-day workweek will only scratch the surface.
The future will be built not by adjusting schedules, but by redefining human connection itself.
By Maria from Lisbon on 28 Apr 2025, 22:09