Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-03T00:11:09.546Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Do Cohort Mortality Trends Emigrate? Insights on The U.K.'s Golden Cohort From A Comparison with a British Settler Country

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 June 2011

Alison O'Connell
Affiliation:
FIA, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

The assumed rate of future mortality improvement has increased over three recent sets of the United Kingdom's national population projections. This optimism has not been so marked in countries which share ancestors with the U.K. population. New Zealand is one such country that provides a data-rich case example in which to investigate the portability of mortality trends.

This paper compares mortality trends in New Zealand with those in England & Wales. Both countries seem to have a ‘golden cohort’ which enjoys faster improving mortality than people born before or after. The birth of the golden cohort in England & Wales coincided with cohort life expectancy there catching up with New Zealand's.

We show that first generation migrants from the U.K. have better mortality than New Zealand born residents likely to have British ancestry. The advantage lasts into older ages, decades after migration. We hypothesise that migrants from the U.K.'s golden cohort brought with them an early life mortality improvement advantage, and additionally benefited from the healthier environment of New Zealand at middle to older ages. Further, given the recent strong mortality improvement in New Zealand, the U.K.'s assumptions for future mortality look relatively optimistic.

Type
Sessional meetings: papers and abstracts of discussions
Copyright
Copyright © Institute and Faculty of Actuaries 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

ABS (2008). Population projections Australia 2006–2101. Australian Bureau of Statistics, Canberra.Google Scholar
Andreev, K. & Vaupel, J. (2005). Patterns of mortality improvement over age and time: estimation, presentation and implications. Paper for conference: PAA 2005 Annual Meeting. Population Association of America. 31 March-2 April, 2005.Google Scholar
Atkinson, J. & Bastiampillai, N. (2009). New Zealand Census-Mortality Study WebTable. Department of Public Health, School of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Otago, Wellington. http://www.otago.ac.nz/NZCMSWebTable. Date accessed 9 February 2009.Google Scholar
Brown, L.B. (1957). Applicants for assisted migration from the United Kingdom to New Zealand. Population Studies, 11(1), 8691.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunnell, K. (2008). Ageing and mortality in the U.K.: National Statistician's Annual Article on the Population. Population Trends, 134, 623.Google Scholar
Dunstan, K., Howard, A. & Cheung, J. (2006). A History of survival in New Zealand: cohort life tables 1876–2004. Statistics New Zealand. Wellington.Google Scholar
Errington, C., Cotterell, G., von Randow, M. & Milligan, S. (2008). A guide to using data from the New Zealand Census: 1981–2006. Statistics New Zealand, Wellington.Google Scholar
Gallop, A. (2008). Mortality projections in the United Kingdom. Paper for conference: Living to 100 and Beyond Symposium. Society of Actuaries.Google Scholar
GROS (2008). Summary comparisons with other countries of the United Kingdom. General Register Office for Scotland. Edinburgh. http://www.gro-scotland.gov.uk/files1/stats/07t1.7.xls. Date accessed 14 May 2009.Google Scholar
Harding, S. (2003). Mortality of migrants from the Indian Subcontinent to England and Wales: effect of duration of residence. Epidemiology, 14(3), 287292.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hobcraft, J., Menken, J. & Preston, S. (1982). Age, period, and cohort effects in demography: a review. Population Index, 48(1), 443.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jatrana, S. & Blakely, T. (2008). Ethnic inequalities in mortality among the elderly in New Zealand. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, 32(5), 437443.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lassetter, J.H. & Callister, L.C. (2009). The impact of migration on the health of voluntary migrants in western societies: a review of the literature. Journal of Transcultural Nursing, 20, 93104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lessof, E. (1949). Mortality in New Zealand and England & Wales. Population Studies 3(1), 7699.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
OCA (2005). National population projections: Actuarial Study No. 4. Office of the Chief Actuary, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Oeppen, J. & Vaupel, J.W. (2002). Broken limits to life expectancy. Science, 296(10), 10291031.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
ONS (2006). National population projections 2004-based. Office for National Statistics.Google Scholar
ONS (2007). Report: 2006-based national projections: underlying long-term assumptions. Population Trends, 129, 8384.Google Scholar
ONS (2008a). Mortality statistics: deaths registered in 2007. Office for National Statistics.Google Scholar
ONS (2008b). National population projections 2006-based. Office for National Statistics.Google Scholar
Peller, S. (1948). Mortality, past and future. Population Studies, 1(4), 405456.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillips, J. & Hearn, T. (2008). Settlers: New Zealand immigrants from England, Ireland and Scotland 1800–1945. Auckland University Press.Google Scholar
Pool, I. (1982). Is New Zealand a ‘healthy country’? The centenary of Dr Alfred Newman's affirmation ‘that it is the healthiest in the face of the Globe’. New Zealand Population Review, 8(2), 227.Google Scholar
Pool, I. (1985). Mortality trends and differentials. In ESCAP Population Division (ed.). Country Monograph Series No. 12: Population of New Zealand Volume 1. New York and Bangkok, United Nations.Google Scholar
Pool, I. & Cheung, J. (2002). Why were New Zealand levels of life-expectation so high at the dawn of the twentieth century? Population Studies Centre, The University of Waikato, Hamilton.Google Scholar
Razum, O. & Twardella, D. (2002). Time travel with Oliver Twist — towards an explanation for a paradoxically low mortality among recent immigrants. Tropical Medicine and International Health, 7(1), 410.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Retirement Commissioner (2007). 2007 Review of Retirement Income Policy. Retirement Commission, Wellington.Google Scholar
Richards, S.J., Kirkby, J.G. & Currie, I.D. (2006). The importance of year of birth in two-dimensional mortality data. British Actuarial Journal, 12(I), 561.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shaw, C. (2004). 2002-based national population projections for the United Kingdom and constituent countries. Population Trends, 115, 615.Google Scholar
Singh, G.K. & Miller, B.A. (2004). Health, life expectancy, and mortality patterns among immigrant populations in the United States. Canadian Journal of Public Health, 95(3).CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
SSA (2009). The 2009 Annual Report of the Board of Trustees of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Federal Disability Insurance Trust Funds. Office of the Chief Actuary, Social Security Administration, Washington DC.Google Scholar
Statistics New Zealand (2007). National Population Projections: 2006 (base) — 2061. Statistics New Zealand, Wellington.Google Scholar
Statistics New Zealand (2008). Permanent and long-term migration to and from the United Kingdom, international travel and migration articles. Statistics New Zealand, Wellington.Google Scholar
Statistics New Zealand (2009). New Zealand Life Tables: 2005–7. Statistics New Zealand, Wellington.Google Scholar
WHO (2006a). Mortality Country Fact Sheet 2006: New Zealand. World Health Organisation.Google Scholar
WHO (2006b). Mortality Country Fact Sheet 2006: United Kingdom. World Health Organisation.Google Scholar
Wild, S.H., Fischbacher, C., Brock, A., Griffiths, C. & Bhopal, R. (2007). Mortality from all causes and circulatory disease by country of birth in England and Wales 2001–2003. J. Public Health, 29(2), 191198.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Willets, R.C. (2004). The cohort effect: insights and explanations. Institute of Actuaries and Faculty of Actuaries.Google Scholar
Young, C.M. (1991). Changes in the demographic behaviour of migrants in Australia and the transition between generations. Population Studies, 45(1), 6789.CrossRefGoogle Scholar