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Main Authors: Welch, Nathan G., Ševčíková, Hana, Raftery, Adrian E.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.05566
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author Welch, Nathan G.
Ševčíková, Hana
Raftery, Adrian E.
author_facet Welch, Nathan G.
Ševčíková, Hana
Raftery, Adrian E.
contents The link between age and migration propensity is long established, but existing models of country-level net migration ignore the effect of population age distribution on past and projected migration rates. We propose a method to estimate and forecast international net migration rates for the 200 most populous countries, taking account of changes in population age structure. We use age-standardized estimates of country-level net migration rates and in-migration rates over quinquennial periods from 1990 through 2020 to decompose past net migration rates into in-migration rates and out-migration rates. We then recalculate historic migration rates on a scale that removes the influence of the population age distribution. This is done by scaling past and projected migration rates in terms of a reference population and period. We show that this can be done very simply, using a quantity we call the migration age structure index (MASI). We use a Bayesian hierarchical model to generate joint probabilistic forecasts of total and age- and sex- specific net migration rates over five-year periods for all countries from 2020 through 2100. We find that accounting for population age structure in historic and forecast net migration rates leads to narrower prediction intervals by the end of the century for most countries. Also, applying a Rogers & Castro-like migration age schedule to migration outflows reduces uncertainty in population pyramid forecasts. Finally, accounting for population age structure leads to less out-migration among countries with rapidly aging populations that are forecast to contract most rapidly by the end of the century. This leads to less drastic population declines than are forecast without accounting for population age structure.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2403_05566
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Bringing Age Back In: Accounting for Population Age Distribution in Forecasting Migration
Welch, Nathan G.
Ševčíková, Hana
Raftery, Adrian E.
Applications
The link between age and migration propensity is long established, but existing models of country-level net migration ignore the effect of population age distribution on past and projected migration rates. We propose a method to estimate and forecast international net migration rates for the 200 most populous countries, taking account of changes in population age structure. We use age-standardized estimates of country-level net migration rates and in-migration rates over quinquennial periods from 1990 through 2020 to decompose past net migration rates into in-migration rates and out-migration rates. We then recalculate historic migration rates on a scale that removes the influence of the population age distribution. This is done by scaling past and projected migration rates in terms of a reference population and period. We show that this can be done very simply, using a quantity we call the migration age structure index (MASI). We use a Bayesian hierarchical model to generate joint probabilistic forecasts of total and age- and sex- specific net migration rates over five-year periods for all countries from 2020 through 2100. We find that accounting for population age structure in historic and forecast net migration rates leads to narrower prediction intervals by the end of the century for most countries. Also, applying a Rogers & Castro-like migration age schedule to migration outflows reduces uncertainty in population pyramid forecasts. Finally, accounting for population age structure leads to less out-migration among countries with rapidly aging populations that are forecast to contract most rapidly by the end of the century. This leads to less drastic population declines than are forecast without accounting for population age structure.
title Bringing Age Back In: Accounting for Population Age Distribution in Forecasting Migration
topic Applications
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2403.05566