The Center for Retirement Research at Boston College has released a new Issue in Brief: “What’s Happening to U.S. Mortality Rates?” by Anqi Chen, Alicia H. Munnell, and Geoffrey T. Sanzenbacher The brief’s key findings are: - Mortality rates, which determine life expectancy, are a key factor in cost projections for the Social Security program.
- Mortality rates consistently improve over time, but the pace of progress varies by year, by age, and by socioeconomic status.
- Over the past 40 years, progress has been driven by medical advances, better access to health care, and a decline in smoking, partly offset by rising obesity.
- Looking to the future, mortality improvements will continue to depend on the same drivers, but the net effects could play out differently.
- The key debate is whether the future will mirror the past, with average rates of improvement of about 1 percent, or whether the pace of progress will slow.
This brief is available here. |
1 comment:
One should not use average rates when comparing overall growth rates. As the writer states, there have been ups and downs. A better measurement value would be to look at annual rate of change over years; 5, 10, 15, 20 year moving annual rates of growth.
The annual rate of growth can be easily calculated knowing the two end points;
FV - ending years life span
PV - Beginning years life span
N - number of years
Annual rate = exp[ln(FV / pv)/N] - 1
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