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Census-based measures of fertility, mortality, and migration

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Title: Life course and cohort measures Author: Initial User Last modified by: Initial User Created Date: 2/19/2004 3:50:15 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Census-based measures of fertility, mortality, and migration


1
Census-based measures of fertility, mortality,
and migration
  • Hist 5011

2
Fertility Yasuba 1962
  • Measure ratio of women aged 15-49 to children
    aged 0-4 for each state (or county)
  • Correlate with characteristics of state (e.g.
    land availability, sex ratio, ethnicity)

3
Fertility Coale and Zelnik 1963
  • Begin with single-year age distribution
  • Adjust for mortality
  • Adjust for census underenumeration
  • Yield number of births in each year, back to
    1800
  • Suggested very early fertility decline

4
Limitations
  • No information on marital fertility
  • No age-specific rates (cannot look at stopping
    vs. spacing)
  • Cannot study differentials between population
    subgroups (e.g. different occupations)

5
Microdata allows own-child fertility analysis
  • Retherford and Cho, 1978
  • Calculate mean number of children of each age
    living with mothers of each age
  • Adjust mean upwards to reflect mortality of
    children, underenumeration, and children residing
    without mothers
  • Yields estimates of age-specific marital fertility

6
Simple own-child approach
  • Even if we can make rough estimates of
    adjustments for whole populations, we cannot do
    so for population subgroups
  • Therefore, adjustments make no sense when
    studying fertility differentials
  • Simple own-child approach uses no adjustments
    just measure mean children under 5 with mothers
    of each age.

7
Children ever born
  • Limitation we dont know when they were born
  • Best for study of completed fertility
  • Can calculate cohort parity distributions for
    older women
  • Allows cohort-parity analysis (David and
    Sanderson 1987)

8
Mortality Two-Census methods
  • Get two adjacent censuses
  • Adjust population counts at each age for
    immigration, emigration, and changes in net
    underenumeration
  • Subtract to estimate number of deaths
  • Divide by midpoint of population to estimate
    age-specific death rates
  • Rough estimates only, since effects of
    adjustments are large

9
Mortality Children-ever-born and children
surviving
  • Calculate percent of children born surviving by
    age of mother
  • Standardize or focus on a particular age group
  • Can be used to study differentials
  • With fancier techniques, can be used to estimate
    age-specific death rates for young people
    (Preston and Haines 1991)

10
Migration Net migration estimates from
aggregate data
  • Eldridge and Thomas 1960
  • Similar to two-census mortality estimation
  • Get age distributions by state
  • Adjust for mortality and differential
    underenumeration
  • The remaining difference between time periods is
    net migration
  • Result slow upward trend in migration since 19th
    century

11
Migration Using birthplace information
  • Calculate percent of native-born persons residing
    out of their state of birth
  • Works especially well for lifetime migration
    (Kelly Hall and Ruggles forthcoming)

12
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13
Migration Record linkage
  • Thernstrom 1963 and many others
  • Ferrie 2004
  • New 1880 linkage project

14
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15
Migration Using children present
  • Can be tricky
  • Easiest measure, if you have enough cases just
    look at persons who have children of a particular
    age
  • Large potential for selection bias

16
Migration residence 5 years ago
  • Good since 1940 U.S., 1960s or 1970s in other
    countries
  • Focus on recent migration
  • Allows many methods
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