previous eras’ low life expectancy was mostly due to high child mortality.
I have long thought that the very idea of “life expectancy at birth” is a harmful one, because it encourages exactly that sort of confusion. It lumps together two things (child mortality and life expectancy once out of infancy) with sufficiently different causes and sufficiently different effects that they really ought to be kept separate.
Does anybody have a source that separates the two out? For example, to what age can the average X year old today expect to live? Or even at a past time?
Does anybody have a source that separates the two out? For example, to what age can the average X year old today expect to live?
Sure, there is the concept of life expectancy at specific age. For example, there is the “default” life expectancy at birth, there is the life expectancy for a 20 year-old, life expectancy for a 60-year-old, etc. Just google it up.
I have long thought that the very idea of “life expectancy at birth” is a harmful one, because it encourages exactly that sort of confusion. It lumps together two things (child mortality and life expectancy once out of infancy) with sufficiently different causes and sufficiently different effects that they really ought to be kept separate.
Does anybody have a source that separates the two out? For example, to what age can the average X year old today expect to live? Or even at a past time?
Sure, there is the concept of life expectancy at specific age. For example, there is the “default” life expectancy at birth, there is the life expectancy for a 20 year-old, life expectancy for a 60-year-old, etc. Just google it up.
It’s kind of important to the life insurance business ….
Thanks. Interestingly, My numbers never matched up between any 2 sources.
The US SSA’s actuarial tables give me a number that’s 5 years different from their own “additional life expectancy” calculator.