Leisure-time activities
AdvertisementCentral Research Services, Inc published a report two months ago regarding leisure activities. The format of their report differs from the usual survey results that I translate as first, they scale the figures up to reflect the whole population (the current population of Japan is somewhere around 127 million), and second, they present the data within a coherent narrative rather than just the usual data dump, so the amount of data available is rather limited. It does say, however, that they interviewed 3,000 people aged 15 and over at some point to get their data. The main data worth presenting is the ranking of participation in various activities, based on how many people from the survey group performed each activity at least once in 2004, so although the lottery, for instance, is high on the list, each participant only spends a couple of minutes per week (or even per year, as the end of year big draw is very, very popular), so if the table was sorted by the actual hours spent, it would look very, very different.
Eating out 72,400,000 Travel within Japan 60,800,000 Driving (or being driven) 55,100,000 Karaoke 49,200,000 Watching videos 48,700,000 Doing the lottery 45,900,000 Personal computing (games, etc) 44,300,000 Cinema 43,900,000 Listening to music 42,400,000 Visiting gardens, museums, zoos 40,600,000 Gardening 37,500,000 Bars, pubs, and other drinking establishments 37,300,000 Bowling 32,000,000 Amusement parks 31,900,000 Physical exercise 30,700,000 Picnic, hiking, hill walking 30,600,000 Board or card games 30,300,000 Console games 30,100,000 Jogging, marathon 26,200,000 Concerts, live music 25,600,000