JSON has its roots in Javascript, which is a dynamic language with loose typing. Every data item is "loosely typed", which means the runtime system doesn't much care whether the thing is a string of characters, or an array, or an integer, or an object or a function. Variables hold "something", and the type is determined when you try to do something with them.
Therefore de-serializing a JSON packet is pretty simple. The representation to be deserialized is either a string or a number.
With XML on the other hand, the XML Schema standard set out a number of specific data types, including basic things like integers, floats, strings, but also dateTime, date, and then more complex derived types, like ordered sequences of those things, arrays of those things, and "unions". When this XML stuff was being defined, there was a great deal of effort around guaranteeing that xml documents were a.) well formed, and b.) valid according to one of these fairly specific schema definitions. Most xml serializers use some portion of the typing magic.
In XML schema you can also specify references, so that one item in an XML document can refer to another item.
As an illustration, right now when I use the stackexchange API to query a list of "question answers" a particular user has posted, I get back a list of items, each of which contains a repeated block for the same user. They all look like this (pseudo code):
{ answers: [
{ answer_id: 98393398398
question_id 28282828
owner: {
name: Cheeso
user_id 48082
reputation: 3093
date_created: 110101010}
},
{ answer_id: 28783398398
question_id 111128828
owner: {
name: Cheeso
user_id 48082
reputation: 3093
date_created: 110101010}
},
...
] }
But XML allows me to refer to other places in the document, so I'd get back something like this (again, pseudo code):
{ users: [ ["#user1", "Cheeso", "48082", 3093 ]] ,
answers: [
{ answer_id: 98393398398
question_id 28282828
owner: #user1 },
{ answer_id: 28783398398
question_id 111128828
owner: #user1},
...
] }
Of course you could structure your json applications to understand and use "in-document references". But the point is, with XML, that is already part of the model.
All of which means serializing and de-serializing XML can be more involved, in practice, than doing the same with JSON.
It's my opinion that people are finding the looser json approach to be preferable because it is more flexible and adaptable, and easier to use. On the other hand some documents are large enough that the rigidity and formality of XML schema is super valuable, and json is just too loose. I'm thinking of an OOXML document, for example.