AccScience Publishing / IJPS / Online First / DOI: 10.36922/ijps.377
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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Long-term impact of mortality on population age structures

Gustavo De Santis1* Giambattista Salinari2
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1 Department of Statistics, Computer Science, Applications (DiSIA), University of Florence, Italy
2 Department of Economics and Business, University of Sassari, Italy
IJPS 2024, 10(4), 87–97; https://doi.org/10.36922/ijps.377
Submitted: 29 September 2023 | Accepted: 2 January 2024 | Published: 19 March 2024
© 2024 by the Author (s). This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ )
Abstract

In this study, we tested the hypothesis that mortality has a greater influence than fertility on shaping population age structures in the long run and that recent mortality rates provide a satisfactory initial approximation for describing observed age structures in most empirical cases. In the theoretical part of this article, we elucidate a potential fallacy in the line of reasoning based on simulations and counterfactuals frequently used to attribute population aging to low fertility rates. The alternative view that we propose leads us to hypothesize that age structures conform, albeit not exclusively, to a standard derived from survival conditions: the age structure of a stationary population within a given period. We tested this hypothesis on all countries, using the data from the United Nations database (1951 – 2021) and specifically on 10 European countries using the data from the Human Mortality Database (1860 – 2019). The empirical results indicate that current survival conditions sufficiently explain a significant portion of the observed age structure across all examined countries and epochs. However, deviations from this underlying, long-term (mortality-driven) path exist, which our approach cannot fully explain. This is where the role of fertility arguably becomes more prominent. Several implications arise from our findings, including the debate on the relative role of fertility and mortality in shaping age structures in the long run, the theoretical meaning and practical use of cross-sectional life tables, and the notion and measure of demographic dividends.

Keywords
Age structure
Aging
Stationary population
Mortality
Fertility
Index of dissimilarity
Funding
We acknowledge the co-funding from these two sources. The first is the Next Generation EU, in the context of the National Recovery and Resilience Plan, Investment PE8— Project Age-It: “Aging Well in an Aging Society’. This resource is co-financed by the Next-Generation EU (DM 1557 11.10.2022). The second is the Italian MUR (PRIN 2022–No. 2022CENE9F, “The pre-Covid-19 stall in life expectancy in Italy: looking for explanations”).
Conflict of interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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International Journal of Population Studies, Electronic ISSN: 2424-8606 Print ISSN: 2424-8150, Published by AccScience Publishing