© 1999 - 2012
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

On the relationship between period and cohort mortality

Services
Bookmark this page
Send this article to a friend
Download to Citation Manager
file RIS format
file BibTeX format
Citations and Similar Articles
PubMed
Articles by John R. Wilmoth
Google Scholar
Articles by John R. Wilmoth
Article and its Citations
 

John R. Wilmoth

 
VOLUME 13 - ARTICLE 11
PAGES 231 - 280
Date Received: 23 May 2005
Date Published: 17 Nov 2005

http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol13/11/

doi:10.4054/DemRes.2005.13.11
   
PDF file Click the icon to view and/or download the PDF file.
Once you are in the PDF file, use your browser back button to return to this page.

Abstract

In this paper I explore the formal relationship between period and cohort mortality, focusing on a comparison of measures of mean lifespan. I consider not only the usual measures (life expectancy at birth for time periods and birth cohorts) but also some alternative measures that have been proposed recently.
I examine (and reject) the claim made by Bongaarts and Feeney that the level of period is distorted, or biased, due to changes in the timing of mortality. I show that their proposed alternative measure, called “tempo-adjusted” life expectancy, is exactly equivalent in its generalized form to a measure proposed by both Brouard and Guillot, the cross-sectional
average length of life (or CAL), which substitutes cohort survival probabilities for their period counterparts in the calculation of mean lifespan.
I conclude that this measure does not in any sense correct for a distortion in period life expectancy at birth, but rather offers an alternative measure of mean lifespan that is approximately equal to two analytically interesting quantities: 1) the mean age at death in a given year for a hypothetical population subject to observed historical mortality conditions but with a constant annual number of births; and 2) the mean age at death, , for a cohort born years ago.
However, I also observe that the trend in period does indeed offer a biased depiction of the pace of change in mean lifespan from cohort to cohort. Holding other factors constant, an historical increase in life expectancy at birth is somewhat faster when viewed from the perspective of cohorts (i.e., year of birth) than from the perspective of periods (i.e., year of death).

Author's affiliation
John R. Wilmoth
University of California at Berkeley, United States of America

Keywords
life expectancy, life span, mortality, tempo-adjusted life expectancy

Word count (Main text)
9614

Other articles by the same author/authors (in Demographic Research)
file[13-10] Introduction to the Special Collection “Human Mortality over Age, Time, Sex, and Place: The 1st HMD Symposium”
file[7-5] The Cancer Transition in Japan since 1951

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
file [23-14] A modified new method for estimating smoking-attributable mortality in high-income countries (mortality, life expectancy)
file [22-23] Mortality in the Caucasus: An attempt to re-estimate recent mortality trends in Armenia and Georgia (mortality, life expectancy)
file [19-35] An integrated approach to cause-of-death analysis: cause-deleted life tables and decompositions of life expectancy (mortality, life expectancy)
file [15-21] Mortality tempo-adjustment: An empirical application (mortality, life expectancy)
file [14-13] Survival differences among the oldest old in Sardinia: who, what, where, and why? (mortality, life expectancy)

[ Back to previous page ]