Original version
Developments in Demographic Forecasting. 2020, 179-192, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-42472-5_9
Abstract
Many statistical agencies routinely produce population forecasts, and revise these forecasts when new data become available, or when current demographic trends indicate that an update is necessary. When the forecaster strongly revises, from one forecast round to the next one, a forecast for a certain target year (for instance the life expectancy in 2050), this indicates large uncertainty connected to mortality predictions. The aim of this chapter is to shed more light on the uncertainty in mortality forecasts, by analysing the extent to which life expectancy predictions for 2030 and 2050 were revised in subsequent rounds of population forecasts published by statistical agencies in selected countries. It updates and extends earlier work that focused on United Nations and Eurostat forecasts published between 1994 and 2004 (Keilman et al. 2008). There the conclusion was that life expectancy forecasts for 18 European countries for the year 2050 had been revised upwards systematically, by around 2 years on average during the 10-year publication period. A recent analysis based on official population forecasts for Norway published in the period 1999–2018 led to the same conclusion (Keilman 2018). Here we will show that the period of upward revisions seems to have ended for some European countries.