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Demographic Components of Future Potential Old-Age Support Ratios
to assumed improvements in mortality, and 0.33 or -17% due to anticipated positive net migration flows ... components are nearly the same but of an opposite sign, -17% vs 16%. Table 3. Demographic components of ...- Authors: Kirill Andreev
- Date: Nov 2023
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge; Technical Skills & Analytical Problem Solving
- Topics: Demography
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Mortality Improvements at Advanced Ages in the U.S.: Progress Masked by Age Misreporting
Mortality Improvements at Advanced Ages in the U.S.: Progress Masked by Age Misreporting This ... individual born in 1933, for example, is only age 17 in 1950 and 27 in 1960, so the assumption that death ...- Authors: Kirill Andreev
- Date: Apr 2020
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge; Technical Skills & Analytical Problem Solving
- Topics: Demography
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2C: Teaching Session: Data Validation
2C: Teaching Session: Data Validation Because data quality is critical in the measurement ... “mortality model” e.g. Gompertz, logistic, Kannisto) 17 Death Rates in the United States, 1959-1969, based ...- Authors: Kirill Andreev, Jean-Marc Fix, Natalia Gavrilova, Jean Marie Robine, Thomas Perls
- Date: Jan 2020
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge
- Topics: Experience Studies & Data
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Regional Mortality in the United States at Ages 80 and Older: An Analysis of Direct Estimates, 1959–2011
Regional ... In this age group, U.S. death rates are about 17% higher on average. However, the U.S. survival ... AR NO FI DW 7.00 WV MS AL NL DK 6.75 6.50 - 17 - Fig. 9. The Force of Mortality by Age for ...- Authors: Kirill Andreev, Danen Gu, Matthew Dupre
- Date: Jul 2017
- Competency: Communication>Written communication
- Topics: Demography>Gender factors; Demography>Longevity; Demography>Population data; Experience Studies & Data>Mortality