In a Stationary Population, the Average Lifespan of the Living Is a Length-Biased Life Expectancy

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Abstract

What is the average lifespan in a stationary population viewed at a single moment in time? Even though periods and cohorts are identical in a stationary population, we show that the answer to this question is not life expectancy but a length-biased version of life expectancy. That is, the distribution of lifespans of the people alive at a single moment is a self-weighted distribution of cohort lifespans, such that longer lifespans have proportionally greater representation. One implication is that if death rates are unchanging, the average lifespan of the current population always exceeds period life expectancy. This result connects stationary population lifespan measures to a well-developed body of statistical results; provides new intuition for established demographic results; generates new insights into the relationship between periods, cohorts, and prevalent cohorts; and offers a framework for thinking about mortality selection more broadly than the concept of demographic frailty.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)207-220
Number of pages14
JournalDemography
Volume59
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 1 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors.

Keywords

  • Length-biased sampling
  • Life expectancy
  • Mortality selection
  • Prevalent cohort
  • Size bias

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