Volume 22 - Article 5 | Pages 115–128  

Life expectancy is the death-weighted average of the reciprocal of the survival-specific force of mortality

By Joel E. Cohen

This article is part of the ongoing Special Collection 8 "Formal Relationships"

Abstract

The hazard of mortality is usually presented as a function of age, but can be defined as a function of the fraction of survivors. This definition enables us to derive new relationships for life expectancy. Specifically, in a life-table population with a positive age-specific force of mortality at all ages, the expectation of life at age x is the average of the reciprocal of the survival-specific force of mortality at ages after x, weighted by life-table deaths at each age after x, as shown in (6). Equivalently, the expectation of life when the surviving fraction in the life table is s is the average of the reciprocal of the survival-specific force of mortality over surviving proportions less than s, weighted by life-table deaths at surviving proportions less than s, as shown in (8). Application of these concepts to the 2004 life tables of the United States population and eight subpopulations shows that usually the younger the age at which survival falls to half (the median life length), the longer the life expectancy at that age, contrary to what would be expected from a negative exponential life table.

Author's Affiliation

Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research

Measuring the concentration of urban population in the negative exponential model using the Lorenz curve, Gini coefficient, Hoover dissimilarity index, and relative entropy
Volume 44 - Article 49

Gompertz, Makeham, and Siler models explain Taylor's law in human mortality data
Volume 38 - Article 29

Taylor's power law in human mortality
Volume 33 - Article 21

Is the fraction of people ever born who are currently alive rising or falling?
Volume 30 - Article 56

Life expectancy: Lower and upper bounds from surviving fractions and remaining life expectancy
Volume 24 - Article 11

Constant global population with demographic heterogeneity
Volume 18 - Article 14

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research

How lifespan and life years lost equate to unity
Volume 50 - Article 24    | Keywords: life expectancy, life table entropy, life years lost, lifespan variation

Subnational contribution to life expectancy and life span variation changes: Evidence from the United States
Volume 50 - Article 22    | Keywords: decomposition methods, life expectancy, lifespan variation, subnational mortality

Mortality inequalities at retirement age between migrants and non-migrants in Denmark and Sweden
Volume 50 - Article 18    | Keywords: immigration, life expectancy, lifespan inequality, Nordic countries, pension age, pension policy

Racial classification as a multistate process
Volume 50 - Article 17    | Keywords: Brazil, demography, increments to life, life expectancy, life table, mortality, multistate, race/ethnicity

Ageing and diversity: Inequalities in longevity and health in low-mortality countries
Volume 50 - Article 12    | Keywords: aging, health, lifespan inequality, longevity, old-age threshold, regional differences, socioeconomic status

Cited References: 2

Download to Citation Manager

PubMed

Google Scholar

Volume
Page
Volume
Article ID