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Title: Multiregional and bi-regional population projection methods: a brief overview


1
  • Multiregional and bi-regional population
    projection methods a brief overview
  • Prepared for
  • Summer School on Projection Methods for Ethnicity
    and Immigration Status
  • Leeds University, July 2009
  • Tom Wilson

2
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • What is a multiregional model?
  • Formal multiregional demography ... is concerned
    with the mathematical description of the
    evolution of human populations over time and
    space Rogers, 1995 p 1
  • A multiregional model is one which explicitly
    includes migration between regions

3
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Why use a multiregional model ?
  • (rather than a simple net migration / net
    migration rate model)
  • Conceptual reasons
  • No such thing as a net migrant, just people
    moving from one place to another
  • Net migration rates do not relate to a correct
    PAR
  • Origin-destination migration rates model
    migration as a function of origin population size
  • Practical reasons
  • Net migration models can give negative
    populations
  • They can result in rogue cohorts thus
    implausible age profiles
  • If you are dealing with many regions it is
    difficult to ensure that migration within the
    system sums to zero.
  • Difficult to smooth net migration rate profiles
    because they are highly variable in shape there
    are no models/theory to draw upon (much easier to
    do this for directional migration age profiles)

4
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Birth of multiregional demography in a nutshell
  • Began in 1960s with work of Andrei Rogers
  • He was interested in generalising the uniregional
    Leslie matrix and the uniregional life table to
    the multiregional case
  • Many other researchers contributed to this
    emerging stream of demographic work in the 1960s
    1970s
  • Phil Rees and Alan Wilson approached
    multiregional demography from a population
    accounting perspective
  • Much theoretical development and empirical work
    done at IIASA in 1970s and 80s

5
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Population accounts (movement perspective)
  • K Population M internal migration E
    emigration
  • I immigration D deaths
  • Ø ignored R accounting residual

6
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Notation
  • a a1 subscript denotes the period-cohort aged
    a at time t and aged a1 at time t1

7
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Movement accounts multiregional model
  • Accounting equation
  • Projection equation
  • Either solve this iteratively, or . . .

8
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Movement accounts multiregional model
  • Matrix M
  • Matrix projection equation
  • See Rogers (1995) Multiregional Demography

9
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Population accounts (transition perspective)
  • Keisj Pop existing in i at time t and surviving
    in j at time t1

10
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Transition accounts multiregional model
  • Accounting equation
  • Projection equations (term by term)
  • etc.
  • See Rees Wilson (1977) Spatial Population
    Analysis

11
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Practical challenges with the implementation of
    multiregional models
  • Models can contain a large number of elements
  • No. of migr. rates
  • no. of regions
  • x no. of regions -1
  • x no. of sexes
  • x no. of age groups
  • x no. of time periods
  • Requires large data to be purchased
  • Suppression of small values in cells
  • Lots of random noise in data
  • Difficult to smooth age profiles with vast
    amounts of noise
  • Computing difficulties
  • Issue of setting assumptions

12
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • What can be done?
  • Aggregation
  • of age groups, spatial units, time periods etc.
  • e.g. switch from single year age groups to 5
    year age groups
  • Decomposition
  • Break up multiregional systems into a no. of
    relatively independent systems
  • e.g. model O-D flows between areas within a
    region/state and a simple distribution for
    other migrations
  • Parameterisation
  • Replace age profiles with a mathematical model
    described by a small no. of parameters
  • Migration pool models
  • Out-migration from each region goes into a pool
    it is then distributed back to regions using
    shares of the pool

13
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • What can be done? (2)
  • Bi-regional models (a form of spatial
    aggregation)
  • Model migration between a region and the rest of
    the system
  • Use uniregional net migration models? NO!

14
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Decomposition
  • Fully multiregional model used for flows within a
    broad region or state
  • Pool model used for flows to distant areas
  • Out-migr to distant areas out-migr rate x PAR
  • Migration to area j out-migr to distant areas x
    share going to j
  • e.g. migration between regions within Australian
    states modelled using a fully multiregional
    model migration between regions in different
    states modelled using shares of total
    out-migration

15
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Migration pool model
  • Step 1
  • Out-migr from each regions is product of
    out-migration rate and population at risk
  • Step 2
  • All out-migration placed in a common 'pool'
  • Step 3
  • Pool of migrants distributed to regions on basis
    of shares

16
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Parameterised model migration schedules
  • Developed by Rogers, Castro colleagues
  • Migration intensity
  • childhood component
  • labour force component
  • retirement component
  • constant component

17
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Bi-regional models
  • Internal system (excl. rest of the world) is
    divided into just two regions. Actually series of
    bi-regional models knitted together.
  • Migration between each region rest of
    system
  • modelled in turn
  • etc.
  • Minor adjustment required to ensure that
    projected internal out-migration and in-migration
    to/from all regions is the same.

18
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Do bi-regional models give similar results to a
    fully multiregional model?
  • Series of empirical tests with fully
    multiregional model several other models,
    including the bi-regional (BR) model

19
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Do bi-regional models give similar results to a
    fully multiregional model? (2)
  • Similarity of projected age profiles

20
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Strengths of the bi-regional model
  • Maintains the important conceptual strength of
    the fully multiregional model of handling place
    to place migration flows (rather than net
    migration)
  • Considerably reduced data requirements (and )
  • Less randomness in age profiles less
    adjustment/smoothing needed (and less staff time)
  • Considerably reduced no. of assumptions that need
    to be made
  • ? important in persuading govt ( others) to use
    such methods
  • Empirical results not far off those produced by
    the fully multiregional model
  • Less projections data to check

21
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
Population projections for NSW Model New South
Wales Demographic Simulation System
(NEWDSS) Projections calculated at 3 levels
(1) NSW as a whole Rest of Aus
(2) Regions of NSW
(3) Statistical Local Areas (SLAs)
Local Government Areas (LGAs)
Strategy regions / subregions
22
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Regional geography

23
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • NEWDSS
  • State Rest of Australia level
  • movement accounts-based bi-regional model
  • single years of age 0-120
  • Regional level
  • movement accounts-based tri-regional model
  • (i) region (ii) rest of NSW (iii) rest of
    Australia
  • single years of age 0-120
  • Constrained to State level
  • Statistical Local Area level
  • transition accounts-based bi-regional model
  • (i) Statistical Local Area (ii) rest of
    Australia
  • 5 year age groups to 85
  • Constrained to regional level

24
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
NEWDSS input and output Data assembled,
checked adjusted in Excel workbook ? Input
files prepared as csv files ? Projection
program (fortran 95) ? Output csv files ? Excel
workbook used to visualise outputs
25
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
Age patterns of interstate migration Bi-regional
model reduces no. of age profiles required just
in- and out-migration profiles needed (not whole
set of O-D profiles) Much easier to smooth as
graphs demonstrate NSW male out-migration
NSW male in-migration
26
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • The changing age profile of Sydney
  • Bulge in age groups in
  • 20s 30s due to migration
  • bulk of net migration gains
  • concentrated at these ages

27
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
Projected population of the Mid-North
Coast 2006 297,000 2036 387,000
28
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
Projected population of the Central West 2006
179,000 2036 183,000
29
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Bi-regional Statistical Local Area model gives
    plausible age profiles
  • Leichhardt council Hunter's Hill
  • The previous net migration rate model produced
    several 'rogue' cohorts

30
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Projected pop'n change 2006-21, NSW Statistical
    Local Areas
  • text

31
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • Concluding remarks
  • Multiregional bi-regional models are
    conceptually much better than net migration
    models because they incorporate place to place
    migration flows
  • The bi-regional model is a reduced form of the
    fully multiregional model which retains
    directional migration whilst reducing data
    requirements and input assumptions
  • Much work remains to be done on
    assumption-setting, esp. in having regionally
    consistent assumptions

32
Multiregional and Bi-regional Population
Projection Methods
  • The end
  • Any questions?
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