Official population statistics and the Human Mortality Database estimates of populations aged 80+ in Germany and nine other European countries

A systematic comparison of the Human Mortality Database and official estimates of populations aged 80+ is presented. We consider statistical series for East and West Germany and also for Denmark, England and Wales, France, Finland, Hungary, the Netherlands, Russia, Sweden, and Switzerland. The Human...

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Main Authors: Dmitri A. Jdanov, Rembrandt D. Scholz, Vladimir Shkolnikov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research 2005-11-01
Series:Demographic Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol13/14/
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spelling doaj-d3bf7aef3a784b6f91d272e9f27eea962020-11-24T20:56:21ZengMax Planck Institute for Demographic ResearchDemographic Research1435-98712005-11-011314Official population statistics and the Human Mortality Database estimates of populations aged 80+ in Germany and nine other European countriesDmitri A. JdanovRembrandt D. ScholzVladimir ShkolnikovA systematic comparison of the Human Mortality Database and official estimates of populations aged 80+ is presented. We consider statistical series for East and West Germany and also for Denmark, England and Wales, France, Finland, Hungary, the Netherlands, Russia, Sweden, and Switzerland. The Human Mortality Database (HMD, www.mortality.org) methodology relies on the methods of extinct and almost extinct generations. HMD estimates are precise if the quality of death data is high and the migration among the elderly is negligible. The comparisons between the HMD and the official populations are not fully appropriate for the 1990s since the HMD calculations are related to official population estimates. A significant overestimation of the male population aged 80+ and especially 90+ between the censuses of 1970 and 1987 was found in West Germany. The relative surplus of men aged 90+ increased from 5 to 20 percent, which expressed in absolute numbers indicates an increase from 2 to 10 thousand. In 1971-1987 the official death rates have fallen dramatically to implausibly low values. In 1987-88 death rates based on the official populations suddenly jumped to the HMD death rates due to the census re-estimation. In the 1990s an accelerated decrease in male death rates has resumed. Among other countries, the relative and absolute deviations from the HMD estimates were especially high in Russia, Hungary, and England and Wales. Regression analysis reveals common factors of the relative deviation from the HMD populations. The deviation tends to decrease with time, increase with age, be higher during inter-census periods than in census years, and to decrease after the introduction of population registers.http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol13/14/age/agingelderlypopulation estimatesquality of statisticsstatistics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dmitri A. Jdanov
Rembrandt D. Scholz
Vladimir Shkolnikov
spellingShingle Dmitri A. Jdanov
Rembrandt D. Scholz
Vladimir Shkolnikov
Official population statistics and the Human Mortality Database estimates of populations aged 80+ in Germany and nine other European countries
Demographic Research
age/aging
elderly
population estimates
quality of statistics
statistics
author_facet Dmitri A. Jdanov
Rembrandt D. Scholz
Vladimir Shkolnikov
author_sort Dmitri A. Jdanov
title Official population statistics and the Human Mortality Database estimates of populations aged 80+ in Germany and nine other European countries
title_short Official population statistics and the Human Mortality Database estimates of populations aged 80+ in Germany and nine other European countries
title_full Official population statistics and the Human Mortality Database estimates of populations aged 80+ in Germany and nine other European countries
title_fullStr Official population statistics and the Human Mortality Database estimates of populations aged 80+ in Germany and nine other European countries
title_full_unstemmed Official population statistics and the Human Mortality Database estimates of populations aged 80+ in Germany and nine other European countries
title_sort official population statistics and the human mortality database estimates of populations aged 80+ in germany and nine other european countries
publisher Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
series Demographic Research
issn 1435-9871
publishDate 2005-11-01
description A systematic comparison of the Human Mortality Database and official estimates of populations aged 80+ is presented. We consider statistical series for East and West Germany and also for Denmark, England and Wales, France, Finland, Hungary, the Netherlands, Russia, Sweden, and Switzerland. The Human Mortality Database (HMD, www.mortality.org) methodology relies on the methods of extinct and almost extinct generations. HMD estimates are precise if the quality of death data is high and the migration among the elderly is negligible. The comparisons between the HMD and the official populations are not fully appropriate for the 1990s since the HMD calculations are related to official population estimates. A significant overestimation of the male population aged 80+ and especially 90+ between the censuses of 1970 and 1987 was found in West Germany. The relative surplus of men aged 90+ increased from 5 to 20 percent, which expressed in absolute numbers indicates an increase from 2 to 10 thousand. In 1971-1987 the official death rates have fallen dramatically to implausibly low values. In 1987-88 death rates based on the official populations suddenly jumped to the HMD death rates due to the census re-estimation. In the 1990s an accelerated decrease in male death rates has resumed. Among other countries, the relative and absolute deviations from the HMD estimates were especially high in Russia, Hungary, and England and Wales. Regression analysis reveals common factors of the relative deviation from the HMD populations. The deviation tends to decrease with time, increase with age, be higher during inter-census periods than in census years, and to decrease after the introduction of population registers.
topic age/aging
elderly
population estimates
quality of statistics
statistics
url http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol13/14/
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