The Island Japan Forgot: Why Shikoku Is Emptying Out
If you look at Japan from space at night, a dazzling arc of light stretches from Tokyo through Nagoya and Osaka to Hiroshima and Fukuoka. This “Pacific Belt” is one of the most economically powerful urban corridors in the world.
But just south of that glowing spine lies a noticeable dark patch.
That dark patch is Shikoku — Japan’s fourth largest island.
With a land area of roughly 18,800 square kilometers, Shikoku is about the size of Vermont or Sardinia. It sits tantalizingly close to Honshu, separated only by the calm waters of the Seto Inland Sea. Osaka is barely 100 kilometers away.
By all logic, Shikoku should be integrated into Japan’s economic heartland.

Instead, it’s emptying out.
Shikoku’s struggles begin with its terrain.
Unlike much of Japan, which benefited from volcanic activity that created fertile soils and broad plateaus, Shikoku is defined by tectonic compression. The Median Tectonic Line — Japan’s longest fault system — slices across the island, dividing it into two dramatically different regions.
To the north lies a relatively dry, sheltered strip along the Seto Inland Sea. This region has modest plains, including the Sanuki Plain in Kagawa Prefecture. But rivers here are short and steep, meaning water retention is poor. For centuries, residents relied on thousands of hand-dug reservoirs to survive chronic drought.
To the south lies an entirely different world.
The Shikoku Mountains dominate the interior, rising sharply and culminating in Mount Ishizuchi, the tallest peak in western Japan. These mountains act as a wall against Pacific moisture. As warm ocean air slams into them, it dumps torrential rain on the southern coast.
Kochi Prefecture is one of the wettest places in Japan — frequently battered by typhoons. The mountains plunge directly into the sea, leaving almost no broad coastal plains for urban development.
The result? The north lacks water. The south lacks flat land. The interior is so rugged that for centuries it was nearly impᴀssable.
Shikoku’s geography didn’t just limit growth — it fractured the island itself.
The name “Shikoku” literally means “four provinces.” Historically, the island was divided into Awa, Tosa, Sanuki, and Iyo. Travel between them was so difficult that it was often easier to sail to Honshu than to cross the mountains internally.

This fragmentation shaped its culture and economy.
While the rest of Japan built major trade roads and industrial hubs, Shikoku’s main connective infrastructure was spiritual: the 88-temple pilgrimage established by the Buddhist monk Kukai in the 8th century.
For over a thousand years, the primary route circling the island was a dirt path for pilgrims.
It fostered hospitality and tradition — but not industrial concentration.
Shikoku’s isolation made it useful to central authorities for another purpose: exile.
Political rivals and disgraced nobles were often banished there. Emperor Sutoku, after losing a power struggle in the 12th century, was exiled to Shikoku, where legend says he died bitter and forgotten.
Yet ironically, this “forgotten island” later helped reshape Japan.
In the 19th century, samurai from the Tosa domain (modern Kochi) played a major role in the Meiji Restoration, which overthrew the Tokugawa shogunate and modernized Japan.
But when modernization began, it bypᴀssed Shikoku.
The Meiji government prioritized efficiency: flat land for factories, deep ports for ships, and straight corridors for railways.
Honshu had them.
Shikoku did not.
As Tokyo, Osaka, and Hiroshima industrialized rapidly, Shikoku remained largely agrarian. It became a supplier of citrus, timber, and paper — not a manufacturing powerhouse.
By the time Japan entered its post–World War II economic boom, Shikoku was already trailing.
Its population peaked in 1950.
It has been declining ever since.
For much of the 20th century, residents believed isolation was their biggest obstacle. If only there were a bridge to Honshu, prosperity would follow.
In 1988, the Seto Ohashi Bridge opened — a 13-kilometer engineering marvel linking Shikoku to the mainland by road and rail.
It was supposed to be salvation.

Instead, it triggered what economists call the “straw effect.”
When a smaller economy connects directly to a much larger one, economic activity often flows outward rather than inward — like liquid through a straw.
Companies in Osaka could now ship goods into Shikoku more easily, undercutting local businesses. Young people could commute — and eventually relocate — to mainland cities with better opportunities.
The bridge didn’t bring growth.
It accelerated departure.

Japan’s Shinkansen bullet train network binds together nearly every major region — from Hokkaido in the north to Kyushu in the south.
Except Shikoku.
It is the only major Japanese island without a high-speed rail connection.
Plans were proposed in the 1970s but shelved after Japan’s economic bubble burst in the 1990s. Today, traveling from Tokyo to Matsuyama requires multiple transfers and roughly six hours.
In a country where time equals productivity, Shikoku feels distant.
Distance discourages investment.

Investment drives population.
Today, Shikoku has about 3.6 million residents — less than 3% of Japan’s total population.
More alarming is its age structure.
In some rural areas of Kochi and Tokushima, over 40% of residents are older than 65. Entire communities struggle to maintain basic infrastructure because there are not enough working-age adults left.
Japan as a whole faces demographic decline.
Shikoku is simply further along the timeline.
Efforts to reverse the trend — including financial incentives for urban dwellers to relocate and successful tech-focused revitalization projects like Kamiyama — have made headlines but not large-scale impact.
For every young entrepreneur who moves in, many more graduates leave.
The feedback loop continues:
Fewer people → fewer services → fewer jobs → fewer reasons to stay.
Shikoku is not empty because it lacks beauty. Its rivers, forests, and coastlines are breathtaking. Its cultural traditions are deeply rooted. Its proximity to major cities should be an advantage.
But geography, infrastructure decisions, and economic gravity combined to place it on the periphery of modern Japan.
In many ways, Shikoku is not a failure.

It is a preview.
As Japan’s overall population continues to decline, other regions may face similar patterns of consolidation toward major urban centers.
Shikoku stands as both warning and experiment — a test case for whether rural revitalization in an aging society is truly possible.
For now, the lights across the water shine brightly.
And Shikoku grows a little dimmer each year.