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Title: The Human Population: Patterns, Processes, and Problematics Lecture


1
The Human PopulationPatterns, Processes, and
ProblematicsLecture 13 Part III Population
Structure Characteristics1) Age Sex2)
Population Aging the life course3) Family
Demography Life Chances4) The Urban Transition
  • Paul Sutton
  • psutton_at_du.edu
  • Department of Geography
  • University of Denver

2
The Age Transition(another component of the
Demographic Transition)
  • The Age Transtion represents a shift from a very
    young population in which there are more males
    than females to an older population with more
    females than males. In between there are bumps
    and dents in the age and sex structure that
    represent powerful forces of social, economic,
    and political change and a source of
    demographic change as well.
  • The interaction of fertility, mortality, and
    migration produce the age and sex structure of a
    population a record of past history and a
    picture of potential future situations.

3
Age Stratification Cohort Flow
  • The idea that societies have separate sets of
    expected roles and obligations for people of
    different ages is captured by the concept of Age
    stratification, whereas cohort flow captures the
    notion that at each age we are influenced by the
    historical circumstances that similarly affect
    other people who are the same age.

4
How real is Age Stratification?
  • The age stratification theory begins with the
    proposition that age is a basis of social
    differentiation in a manner analogous with social
    class. The term stratification implies a set of
    inequalities , and in this case if refers to the
    fact that societies distribute resources
    unequally by age. These resources include not
    only economic goods but also such crucial
    intangibles as social approval, acceptance, and
    respect. This theory is not a mere description of
    status, however it introduces a dynamic element
    by recognizing that aging is a process of social
    mobility.
  • As the individual ages, he(she) too moves within
    a social hierarchy. She goes from one set of
    age-related social roles to another and at each
    level receives greater or lesser rewards than
    before.
  • In contrast to other forms of social mobility,
    aging is inevitable, universal and unidirectional.

5
Demographic, Social, Economic Phenomena that
vary with age
6
Some Age Stratification Questions
  • Since income (power) increase with age how might
    a very young population like Mexicos differ from
    an older population like the U.S.?
  • A few hundred years ago European society had
    essentially 3 age strata Infancy, Adulthood,
    Old Age Power was concentrated with the Old Age
    Strata
  • Modern Western societies seem to have at least 7
    age strata Infancy, Childhood, Adolescence,
    Young Adulthood, Middle Age, Young-Old, and
    Old-Old Power is Concentrated in Middle Age
    Young-Old
  • Are we evolving to a Culture of Youth with Power?

7
Age Stratification can vary with Cohort Flow
  • When my dad says to me Son, when I was your
    age. I interrupt him and say Dad, You were
    never my age.
  • A Cohort refers to a group of people born during
    the same time period.
  • Each cohort starts out with a given size which,
    save for additions from immigration, is the
    maximum size it can ever attain. Over the life
    course of the cohort, some portion of the its
    members survive, while others move away or die
    until the entire cohort is destroyed. Each cohort
    starts out also with a given composition it
    consists of members born with certain
    characteristics and dispositions. Over the life
    course of the individual, some of these
    charactersistics are relatively stable (a
    persons sex, color, genetic makeup, country of
    birth, or at entry into adulthood in our
    society the level of educational achievement
    are unlikely to change) When successive cohorts
    are compared, they resemble each other in certain
    respects, but differ markedly in other repsects
    in initial size and composition, in age-specific
    patterns of survival (or longevity), and in the
    period of history covered by their respective
    life span.

8
The Lexis Diagram(I find this fairly useless)
  • A graphical device for comparing Period vs.
    Cohort Information

9
Age Cohort Age Strata Interaction
  • As cohorts flow through time,
  • Their respective sizes and
  • Characteristics may alter the
  • Allocation of status and thus
  • The socialization into various
  • Age-related roles because each
  • cohort is moving through history
  • together, whereas each separate
  • cohort is moving through a different moment in
    history. The life experiences of cohorts born in
    1900, 1920, and 1940 vary dramatically. As they
    move through time , the characteristics of
    cohorts may change in response to changing social
    and economic conditions will influence the
    formation of new cohorts. This continual feedback
    between the dynamics of successive cohorts and
    the dynamics of other changes in society produces
    a constant shifting in the status and meaning
    attached to each age stratum, providing an
    evolutionary link between the age structure and
    the social structure.

10
More Cohort Factoids
  • Common names for Cohorts The Great Generation
    (The WWII adults), The Baby Boomers,
    Generation X, Millenials
  • What does Age Structure Cohort Dynamics say
    about the Baby Boom generation what happened?
  • Easterlins Relative Cohort Size Hypothesis
    Suggested that Larger cohort would increase
    supply of labor relative to demand and thus
    depress wages and leave boomers less well off
    than their parents.
  • Did this happen? NOBoomers adjusted by 1)
    Delaying marriage, 2) Postponing children in
    marriage, 3) Sending women to work. Downsides1)
    Not Financially ready to retire Higher suicide
    rates

11
Sex Gender
  • It is a common assumption that there are the same
    numbers of males and females at each age
    actually this is rarely the case. Migration,
    Mortality, and Fertility operate differently to
    create inequalities in the ratio of males to
    females (the sex ratio)

12
Fertility the Sex Ratio
  • Sex Ratio is 104 110 in all human societies
  • U.S. rates lower, Asian rates higher
  • We dont know why.
  • Data on miscarriages and fetal deaths suggest
    that more males conceived than females
  • Males have higher death rates from conception
    onward. Higher sex ratio may be cause or result
    of this fact.
  • Main Conclusion Men outnumber women in the early
    years of a cohort.

13
Mortality and the Sex Ratio
  • Men have higher death rates that women at every
    age throughout the life cycle.
  • As a cohort ages the sex ratio inevitably drops.
  • This is why Cathy the cartoon character cant
    find a mate.
  • In Canada, sex ratio is high because migrants to
    Canada are predominantly men.
  • In Mexico, sex ratio is low because emigrants
    from Mexico are predominantly men.
  • In U.S., women start to outnumber men in the
    25-29 age bracket.

14
Sex Ratio as a function of Age
15
Characterizing Age Structure
  • Typically this is done with a Population Pyramid
  • A population is YOUNG if 35 or more of its
    population is under 15 years of age.
  • A population is OLD if 12 or more of its
    population is over 65 years of age.
  • A population is AGING if the proportion of
    people over 65 is increasing.
  • Key figures of Merit Average Age, Dependency
    Ratio, and Age Specific Growth Rates

16
Global Patterns of Young Old Populations
17
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18
More Population Pyramids
19
Figures of Merit that briefly summarize previous
pyramids
  • Average Age (actually the median age)
  • Nigeria 17.4 Mexico 23.3
  • Canada 36.9 United States 35.7
  • Dependency Ratio (Old Young) / (Working Age)
  • Sample Population of 100 people 45 under 15, 3
    over 65
  • Dependency Ratio is 48/52 or .92 (very much like
    Nigeria)
  • Sample Population of 100 people 19 under 15, 13
    over 65
  • Dependency Ratio is 32/68 or .47 (very much like
    Canada)
  • Note Dependency Ration does not capture relative
    s of old Young

20
China India(changes in Age Specific Growth
Rates 1980 2000)
Which country is in better shape and why?
21
Stable Stationary Populations
  • A Stable population is one in which the age
    specific birth and death rates do not change.
    This Means that the proportional look of the
    population pyramid does not change. However, the
    population could be growing or shrinking.
  • A Stationary population is one in which it is
    both stable AND at zero population growth (its
    total size is not changing)
  • Model Stable Population is often used as an
    assumption when limited measurements available

22
Population Projections Forecasts
  • A population projection is the calculation of the
    number of persons we can expect to be alive at a
    future date given the number now alive and given
    reasonable assumptions about age-specific
    mortality and fertility rates. (based on
    assumptions)
  • Demographic theory is not now, nor is it likely
    ever to be, sophisticated enough to be able to
    predict future shifts in demographic processes,
    especially fertility and migration, over which we
    as individuals exercise considerable control.
  • A population forecast is a statement about what
    you expect the future population to be.
  • Forecasts of weather and earthquakes, where the
    next few hours are ths ubject of interest, and of
    unemployment, where the next year or two is what
    counts, are difficult enough. Population
    forecasts, where one peers a generation or two
    ahead, are even more difficult.

23
Population Projection Methods
  • 1) Extrapolation
  • 2) Components of Growth
  • 3) Cohort Component Method
  • 4) Backward or Inverse Projection

24
Extrapolation
  • Plot known populations as a function of time
  • Fit a mathematical function to the points.
  • E.G. Pop(t) some mathematical function of t
  • Function typically linear or exponential
  • Plug in future t to calculate Pop.
  • Note Does not work very well

25
Components of Growth
  • This is using the very fundamental population
    equation
  • Problem How do you know future Birth, Death, and
    Migration Figures?

26
Cohort Component Method
  • This is the most sophisticated method of
    projecting population. You need a lot of
    information to do this including
  • Complete Age Sex Structure of Population at
    some time (a population pyramid)
  • 2) Age Sex specific Mortality, and Migration
    rates. And Age Specific Fertility Rates.
  • 3) Can be tweaked by guessing how specific
    Mortality, Fertility, Migration rates will vary
    as a function of time.

27
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28
Cohort Component continued..
1995 2000
2005
  • 2015
    2050

Cohort Component for Mexico with constant
fertiltiy (3.3) and constant Life Expectancy
(72.2) and constant annual out-migration (300,000)
29
Backward or Inverse Projection
  • Inverse projections can be done via any method
    (extrapolation, components of growth, or cohort
    component)
  • Best methods use reverse cohort component in
    which a good Age Sex structure is obtained with
    best estimates of Age Sex specific Mortality
    and Migration rates and Age specific Fertility
    rates.
  • Wrigley and Schofield used backwards estimates
    from 1871 census of England and Wales to prepare
    a demographic history of England.
  • Whitmore used Inverse projection to determine
    that 90 of the population of the Basin of Mexico
    died in the first 100 years of European Contact.

30
The Impact of Declining Mortality
Strangely enough Longer life expectancy Makes
the pyramid Wider at the bottom Assuming all
Other Things stay equal
31
Declining Mortality continued
Declining Mortality Alone increases Absolute
numbers Across the board But much
more Dramatically at Very Young and Very Old.This
is Because changes In death rates not Equal
across the Board. Mostly due To lowered infant
Mortality rates
32
Declining Mortality for U.S.
  • Increased life expectancy in the U.S. (e.g. going
    from 65 to 75 is not really due to lower infant
    mortality but simply the fact that people live
    longer. This kind of change in mortality does not
    have the same kind of impact on the age and sex
    structure of the population.

33
Declining Fertility Age Sex Structure
  • Changes in
  • Fertility has biggest
  • long term impact on
  • age and sex structure
  • of a population
  • whereas
  • Migration has the
  • biggest short
  • term impact. This is
  • changing fertility
  • only with Life Expectancy of 40 years. This
    population would collapse disappear because 2.1
    Fertility not above replacement level

34
Declining Fertility w/ Longer Life Expectancy (80
years)
35
Saudi Arabia The stories in Pop Pyramids
through time
  • Pop of 3 million just after WWII. Today 20
    million, TFR 6.1, Life expectancy 70 years.
    Massive in-migration of labor now. Massive
    out-migration of labor in the near future?

36
Migration the Age Sex structure
What impact will this have on total U.S.
Population Pyramid?
37
U.S. Population Pyramid with without migration
50 years from now
38
City Scale Geography of Population Pyramids (San
Diego
  • Match each neighborhood to the following
  • Right near SDSU
  • Suburban San Diego
  • Just over border from Mexico with high immigrant
    population
  • Downtown San Diego (similar to downtown Denver)

39
Demography and Society
  • It is through the mechanism of the age and sex
    structure that all demographic changes are
    translated into a forces with which me must cope.
    A high birth rate does not simply mean more
    people It means that a few years from now there
    will be more kids entering school than before
    that 18 years from now there will be more new job
    hopefuls and college freshmen than before. An
    influx of young adult immigrants this year means
    a larger than average number of older people 30
    or 40 years from now (and it may mean an
    immediate sudden rise in the number of births
    with all the attendant consequences).

40
Population Momentum
  • Young age structure populations have a momentum
    for population growth built into them. The 50 or
    so people under 15 years of age will probably
    survive and have children. Even if they reduce
    fertility to a replacement level of 2.1 the
    population will grow for a while. One way to
    measure momentum If a population were to
    immediately reduce its fertility to replacement
    how big would it grow to before it became
    stationary?
  • Africa and Asia 1.56 times bigger
  • United States 1.10 times bigger
  • Population Momentum is the dominant force driving
    population growth in the world today. Only in
    Sub-Saharan Africa is the impact of high
    fertility greater than momentum

41
Reading an Age StructureAfineresolution
PopulationPyramid for the United States
42
Questions for Previous Slide
  • Can you see the baby boom? Did it start with a
    bang?
  • Why is it hard to see the Depressions impact on
    fertility?
  • According to FBI data there were 50 more arrests
    in 1980 than in 1970? Had society fallen apart or
    does the Age structure explain this?
  • When was the Baby Bust? (aka Birth Dearth)
  • What social processes contributed to the Baby
    Bust?
  • What was a good decade to be born in
    demographically and why?
  • What is a hot political issue associated with the
    aging of the baby boom?

43
Because I PromisedRacial Breakdown of U.S.
Population
44
The Demographic Transitionas seen in Population
Pyramids
-?
45
Next Up..
  • Chapter 9
  • Population Aging and the Life Course
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