Updated
Updated · CBS New York · Jun 14
Japan Keeps Obesity Near 4% Through 10,000-Step Days and School Lunches
Updated
Updated · CBS New York · Jun 14

Japan Keeps Obesity Near 4% Through 10,000-Step Days and School Lunches

1 articles · Updated · CBS New York · Jun 14

Summary

  • Japan’s obesity rate is about 4%—roughly one-tenth the U.S. level—as daily walking, smaller portions and structured eating habits shape routine life more than gym culture.
  • 10,000 steps a day is common in Tokyo, and companies such as Tanita reinforce that culture by requiring monthly weigh-ins for staff and tracking steps through employee badges.
  • Workers over 40 face mandatory measurements because higher national health insurance payments kick in if employers do not monitor them, giving corporate wellness a direct financial incentive.
  • School lunches extend those habits early: locally sourced meals heavy on vegetables are prepared with on-site nutritionists, and fried foods appear only about twice a month.
  • That system, kept after a post-World War II free-meal program, aims to teach children lifelong eating habits alongside traditions such as hara hachi bu—stopping at 80% full.

Insights

Beyond low obesity, does Japan's intense health focus create a hidden mental health or eating disorder crisis?
If Japan has solved obesity, why is its healthcare market projected to grow to $347 billion by 2032?
Is Japan's health success due to its culture, or its government-designed cities and national healthcare system?