6533b855fe1ef96bd12afd63

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Do different models induce changes in mortality indicators? That is a key question for extending the Lee-Carter model

Ana DebónSteven HabermanFrancisco MontesEdoardo Otranto

subject

Health Toxicology and MutagenesisPopulationESTADISTICA E INVESTIGACION OPERATIVALee–Carter modellcsh:MedicineSample (statistics)forecastingHG01 natural sciencesArticle010104 statistics & probabilityLife ExpectancyMortality indicators0502 economics and businessEconometrics0101 mathematicsMortalityeducationBlock-bootstrapMathematicsProbabilityfunctional ANOVAeducation.field_of_study050208 financeModels StatisticalLee Carter models block-bootstrap functional ANOVA forecasting mortality indicatorsMortality rate05 social scienceslcsh:RPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthblock-bootstrapFunctional ANOVAMortality dataParametric modelmortality indicatorsAnalysis of varianceLee-Carter modelsForecasting

description

[EN] The parametric model introduced by Lee and Carter in 1992 for modeling mortality rates in the USA was a seminal development in forecasting life expectancies and has been widely used since then. Different extensions of this model, using different hypotheses about the data, constraints on the parameters, and appropriate methods have led to improvements in the model's fit to historical data and the model's forecasting of the future. This paper's main objective is to evaluate if differences between models are reflected in different mortality indicators' forecasts. To this end, nine sets of indicator predictions were generated by crossing three models and three block-bootstrap samples with each of size fifty. Later the predicted mortality indicators were compared using functional ANOVA. Models and block bootstrap procedures are applied to Spanish mortality data. Results show model, block-bootstrap, and interaction effects for all mortality indicators. Although it was not our main objective, it is essential to point out that the sample effect should not be present since they must be realizations of the same population, and therefore the procedure should lead to samples that do not influence the results. Regarding significant model effect, it follows that, although the addition of terms improves the adjustment of probabilities and translates into an effect on mortality indicators, the model's predictions must be checked in terms of their probabilities and the mortality indicators of interest.

10.3390/ijerph18042204http://hdl.handle.net/11570/3192975