This is the first weekend since the state of emergency has expanded to 11 prefectures.

The result was that the number of people at major locations such as train stations decreased from before the declaration and increased from the time of the declaration last spring.

We analyzed how cross-prefecture movements changed in the state of emergency.

NHK used data collected by NTT DoCoMo from mobile phone base stations in a privacy-protected manner to analyze the estimated number of people who traveled across prefectures this weekend on the 16th and 17th.


(15 to 79 years old. Comparison based on the number of people in the 3:00 pm range when people move a lot)

Moving from "declared area" to "non-declared area"

The number of people who moved from 11 prefectures with a state of emergency to areas without a state of emergency decreased by 25% compared to the average of last month's holidays.



However, it increased by 10% compared to the average holidays when the state of emergency was declared last spring.

Conversely, the number of people who flowed in from areas where declarations were made and areas where declarations were made decreased by 13% compared to last month.



However, it increased by 14% compared to the time of the state of emergency declared last spring.

Analyzing each area ...

Looking at the people who have leaked from the areas where the state of emergency has been declared, the


number of people who have leaked from the three prefectures of Kanto

has

decreased by 27%

compared to last month's holiday, and


from Tochigi prefecture Was down 18%,


▽ Aichi and Gifu prefectures were down 32%,


▽ Osaka and Kyoto prefectures, Hyogo prefecture were down 20%, and


▽ Fukuoka prefecture was down 20%.



On the other hand, compared to the holidays of the first state of emergency, each increased by about 10%.



The inflow was similar.



In this state of emergency, the number of cross-prefecture movements has decreased, but not as much as it did last spring.



The government has a basic policy of calling for refraining from going out and moving unnecessarily.