Britain’s streets are a mess. Crisp packets dance in the wind, coffee cups colonise gutters, and the detritus of fast-food culture festers in every corner. We have tried fines, public information films and the occasional celebrity-fronted clean-up campaign. Nothing seems to stick. So perhaps we should look to Tokyo, where a new crackdown on littering has taken a distinctly psychological turn.
Last week, the Tokyo Metropolitan Government announced a zero-tolerance policy on littering in the city’s 23 wards. Offenders now face on-the-spot fines of up to ¥20,000, roughly £110. But the real innovation is the public shaming element: those caught will have their names and photos published on a dedicated website. It is a technique that plays on a deeply ingrained cultural trait, the concept of 'meiwaku' or causing inconvenience to others. In Japan, public littering is not just an environmental crime, it is a social one.
By contrast, Britain’s approach has been characterised by a grudging acceptance that some litter is inevitable. We have tolerated overflowing bins, lazy takeaways and the morning-after mess of a night out. The recent rise in fly-tipping, up 16% in 2023 according to DEFRA, suggests a broader breakdown in civic pride. We seem to have lost the collective horror of mess that still exists in parts of East Asia.
Yet the parallels are not perfect. Tokyo’s streets have long been remarkably clean, partly because littering was already a rare transgression. The new rules are as much about reinforcing existing norms as punishing outliers. Here, we are starting from a lower base. A 2022 Keep Britain Tidy survey found that 62% of people admitted to dropping litter at least once in the past year. For many, it has become a casual habit, not a shameful act.
What can we learn? It would be easy to dismiss Tokyo’s approach as culturally specific, but the psychology is universal. Humans are social animals who respond to perceived norms. When we see litter everywhere, we feel justified in adding our own. The art of ‘social proof’ works both ways. A truly zero-tolerance policy, combined with visible enforcement and a dose of public naming and shaming, could shift that equilibrium.
But a word of caution: Britain has a complicated history with public humiliation. The stocks were abolished for a reason. We are a nation that values the right to make mistakes in private. Yet something has to change. The cost of litter clean-up to local authorities in England alone is over £1 billion a year. That is money that could be spent on schools, libraries or social care.
The real revolution would be one of attitude. Tokyo’s crackdown is not just about fines, it is about redefining what is acceptable. As we watch from across the world, we might ask ourselves: do we want to live in a country where litter is the norm, or where every pavement is a source of civic pride? The answer, surely, is that we cannot afford to be too polite to insist on clean streets. Sometimes, a little shame is a small price to pay for dignity.










