Fertility, mortality, migration, and population scenarios for 195 countries and territories from 2017 to 2100: a forecasting analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study
University of Washington · Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
Abstract
Understanding potential patterns in future population levels is crucial for anticipating and planning for changing age structures, resource and health-care needs, and environmental and economic landscapes. Future fertility patterns are a key input to estimation of future population size, but they are surrounded by substantial uncertainty and diverging methodologies of estimation and forecasting, leading to important differences in global population projections. Changing population size and age structure might have profound economic, social, and geopolitical impacts in many countries. In this study, we developed novel methods for forecasting mortality, fertility, migration, and population. We also assessed potential economic and geopolitical effects of future demographic shifts.
We modelled future population in reference and alternative scenarios as a function of fertility, migration, and mortality rates. We developed statistical models for completed cohort fertility at age 50 years (CCF50). Completed cohort fertility is much more stable over time than the period measure of the total fertility rate (TFR). We modelled CCF50 as a time-series random walk function of educational attainment and contraceptive met need. Age-specific fertility rates were modelled as a function of CCF50 and covariates. We modelled age-specific mortality to 2100 using underlying mortality, a risk factor scalar, and an autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) model. Net migration was modelled as a function of the Socio-demographic Index, crude population growth rate, and deaths from war and natural disasters; and use of an ARIMA model. The model framework was used to develop a reference scenario and alternative scenarios based on the pace of change in educational attainment and contraceptive met need. We estimated the size of gross domestic product for each country and territory in the reference scenario. Forecast uncertainty intervals (UIs) incorporated uncertainty propagated from past data inputs, model estimation, and forecast data distributions.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 377.13
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 34
Authors
24- SEStein Emil Vollset
University of Washington, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
- EGEmily Goren
University of Washington, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
- CYChun-Wei Yuan
University of Washington, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
- JCJackie Cao
University of Washington, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
- ASAmanda Smith
University of Washington, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
Topics & keywords
- Population
- Total fertility rate
- Fertility
- Population projection
- Birth rate
- Population growth
- Autoregressive integrated moving average
- Demographic transition
- Good health and well-being