Title: Demographic Methods
1Demographic Methods
100
35
80
Studying Individual, Family and Population
Changes From Womb to Tomb
Pr (Dying)
Pr (Conception)
Pr (Ever Marrying)
0 15 Age
60 120
15 20
Age 25
30
3 Days before Ovulation Day of
Ovulation 3 Days After Ovulation
2Examples of Recent Demographic Analysis
- Teen Births Racial differences
- Fertility How babies are delivered in U.S.
- Marriage How Many Never Marry
- Longevity Recent Trends in the U.S.
3Teen Births
4Types of Birth
5Percent Never Married U.S., By Age, Sex, and
Year, 2000
6Median Age at First Marriage U.S.
7Longevity
8DEMOGRAPHIC METHODS
- Where are we headed?
- Why study demographic methods?
- Satisfies BSH requirement
- Other Really Good Reasons
- Complements many disciplines
- Many applications
- Estimating Trends and Public Policy
- Social Security, Building Schools/Roads
- Increasing availability of survival data
- Skills to enhance employment
- Think at the population level
9Acquiring Practical Skills
- Numerical analysis
- Finding relevant printed electronic data
- Presenting technical information
10Computation
- Please bring a calculator to lectures and labs
- Most complex functions are
- Raising something to a power xy or ey
- Taking a natural logarithm loge(x)
- Most of the work will be handled in Excel
spreadsheets or SAS/Stata
11Next Time
- Read Hinde Chapters 1-3
- Turn in Chapter 2 Excel problems with graphs
- http//www.prb.org/
- Look for Population A Lively Introduction on
right panel - Review pps 1- 22
12Demography Certificate
http//www.demography.utah.edu
13WHAT IS DEMOGRAPHY?
- Demography is the study of population structure
and change Hinde, 1998 - Demography is the scientific study of human
populations, primarily with respect to their
size, their structure and their development
IUSSP, 1982
Population Studies
Formal Demography
14What Makes an Analysis Demographic?(1 of 2)
- Vital Rates
- Natality, Nuptiality, Mortality, Migration
- Health, Marriage, Employment
- Linkage of Vital Rates to Population Structure
- What if everyone stopped having children or lived
to be 200 years old? (film Children of Men) - Demographic Theories
- Easterlin Hypothesis size of cohort affects
individual behavior
15What Makes an Analysis Demographic?(2 of 2)
- Key Methodological Innovations
- Life Table
- Standardization and Decomposition
- Differences in vital rates (births, deaths,
migration between two populations is due in part
to age composition (whos older/younger) and the
rates at each age. - Survival Analysis
- Classic vs the New
16How Many People Have Ever Lived on Earth?
- 75 percent of the people who had ever been born
were alive in 1970 - What do you need to know to see if this is
reasonable???
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18RATES
- Number of deaths in 2000 (these are thetas ? in
Hinde) - Bostwana 29,100
- Sweden 49,339
- Russia 2,051,000
- Utah 13,042 (2002)
- Population sizes in mid-2000
- Bostwana 1,651,000
- Sweden 5,176,000
- Russia 145,491,000
- Utah 2,338,761 (2002)
- M-type mortality rates
- Bostwana 29,100 / 1,651,000 0.0176
- Sweden 49,339 / 5,176,000 0.0095
- Russia 2,051,000 / 145,491,000 0.0141
- Utah 13,042 / 2,338,761 0.0056
19Death Rates
- Will return to Q-type (cohort) death rates when
we discuss survival models - Assume m-type death rates
- Crude death rates
- Age-specific death rates
20Using Excel and Hindes Data
21Calculating Death Rates In Excel
22PERIODS AND COHORTS
- Periods
- Time point or interval
- Period perspective looks at populations or
subpopulations for a given year or for a series
of years - e.g. deaths to aged 90 in the US for 1900, 1910,
etc. - Cohort
- a group of people sharing a common characteristic
followed over time - e.g. the birth cohort of 1983, the 2001 marriage
cohort - Cohort perspective follows a cohort over time as
they age
23Todays Topics
- Components of population change
- Periods and cohorts
- Ratios and proportions
- Rates and probabilities
- Lexis Diagrams
- Demographic Data
24What is a population?
- Collection of people alive at a certain point in
time in a specified country/area who meet certain
criteria - Population of Salt Lake City in mid-2001 aged 65
- Not geographically bound
- Jewish diaspora, Mormon Pioneers
- Distinction between De jure vs. De facto
population - What is usual residence? Not easy to define for
some groups, e.g. students, traveling
communities, seasonal workers, children who
divide time between divorced parents - Pedigrees
25COMPONENTS OF POPULATION CHANGE
- Three components
- Births
- Deaths
- Migration
- Population change occurs because people make
transitions between states
26E(t)
Alive and in the population
Alive and in another population
I(t)
E(t)
D(t)
Unborn
Dead
27Alive
Dead
Sterile
Sterile
Sterile
Having Had No Children
Having Had 1 Children
Having Had 2 Children
Dead
Dead
Dead
28The demographic accounting equation
- Final pop
- Initial pop births deaths immigration -
emigration - P(tn) P(t) B(t) D(t) I(t) E(t)
- Natural change B D
- Net balance of migration I E
- Example
- Mid-1998 pop of UK 59,237,000
- Births mid-1998 to mid-1999 711,000
- Deaths mid-1998 to mid-1999 635,000
- Net balance of international migration 188,000
- Mid-1999 pop of UK 59,501,000
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32RATIOS
- Ratios
- Ratio is a number divided by any other number
- e.g. x/y
- e.g. sex ratio (no. of males / no. of females)
k - For the UK in mid-1998 sex ratio
- (29,128,400 / 30,108,100) 100 96.7
- For 2000 Utah------?
Age Total Males Females
Other ratios include 1 The dependency ratio 2
The child-woman ratio 3 Parity progression ratios
33Proportions/Percentage
- Ratio in which the denominator includes numerator
? x/(x y) - Proportion to refer to groups (rather than
events) - Proportion of British population from an ethnic
minority in mid-2000 was 4,039,000 / 57,057,000
7.1
Percentage of Hispanics by Selected Utah
Counties 2000
34Rates and Exposure
- Rate ( of events) / ( of person-years lived)
k - k is often 1000
- Number of person-years lived population at risk
- How are person-years defined?
- 3 people in a pop for 1 year
- Person-years 3 people 1 year 3
person-years - 3 people in pop for 1 year 1 person in pop for
½ year - Person-years (3 people 1 yr) ( 1 person
½ yr) - 3½ person-years
- Normally use mid-point pop (mean of start
end-of-interval populations)
35Lexis Diagrams, Cohorts, and Social and
Individual Change
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38 maPm
q (2m)/(2m)
39Which Population has the best life expectancy???
40Trends in Life Expectancy, by Region.Life
Expectancy at Birth, in Years
Source United Nations, World Population
Prospects The 2002 Revision (medium scenario),
2003.
41Jeanne Louise Calment Died 1997 at age
122 Longest-lived person with authenticated
records Bore one child
42Sources of Data
- Vital Records
- U.S. Census Records
- Genealogies
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4731 American Community Survey Test Sites
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49 Survey Sampling
- Sampling frames and generalizability
- Nonresponse
- Total Item
- Prospective/longitudinal
- Retrospective/cross sectional
- World Fertility Surveys - often with illiterate
respondents - Demographic and Health Surveys
- Self vs proxy
- Identifiers to link to other data
- Mode of administration (phone, in-person, mail,
web) - Questionnaire construction
- Length of survey
- Types of questions
- Factual or subjective