Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- 1 Social accounting: essays in honour of Sir Richard Stone
- 2 A SAM for Europe: social accounts at the regional level revisited
- 3 Interregional SAMs and capital accounts
- 4 Social accounting matrices and income distribution analysis in Kenya
- 5 Structure of the Bangladesh interregional social accounting system: a comparison of alternative decompositions
- 6 Decompositions of regional input–output tables
- 7 Consistency in regional demo-economic models: the case of the northern Netherlands
- 8 A CGE solution to the household rigidity problem in extended input–output models
- 9 Operationalising a rural–urban general equilibrium model using a bi-regional SAM
- 10 Combatting demographic innumeracy with social accounting principles: heterogeneity, selection, and the dynamics of interdependent populations
- 11 A micro-simulation approach to demographic and social accounting
- Bibliography
- Index
10 - Combatting demographic innumeracy with social accounting principles: heterogeneity, selection, and the dynamics of interdependent populations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- 1 Social accounting: essays in honour of Sir Richard Stone
- 2 A SAM for Europe: social accounts at the regional level revisited
- 3 Interregional SAMs and capital accounts
- 4 Social accounting matrices and income distribution analysis in Kenya
- 5 Structure of the Bangladesh interregional social accounting system: a comparison of alternative decompositions
- 6 Decompositions of regional input–output tables
- 7 Consistency in regional demo-economic models: the case of the northern Netherlands
- 8 A CGE solution to the household rigidity problem in extended input–output models
- 9 Operationalising a rural–urban general equilibrium model using a bi-regional SAM
- 10 Combatting demographic innumeracy with social accounting principles: heterogeneity, selection, and the dynamics of interdependent populations
- 11 A micro-simulation approach to demographic and social accounting
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Richard Stone's work teaches us the importance of identifying the proper intersectoral or interstate flows to enter as numerators in constant-coefficient social accounting models, and of relating these numerators to appropriate denominators measuring stocks. When applied in demographic definitional and structural equations, such procedures lead to correctly specified ‘incidence’ rates and the subpopulations ‘at risk’ of experiencing the changes brought about by these particular rates. In this context, models of the determinants and consequences of migration, for example, that rely on the ‘net migration rate’ are misspecified. So too are models of labour force activity that rely on the ‘labour force participation rate’. In both instances the denominators of the rates do not correspond to the subpopulations that are at risk of experiencing the events represented in the numerators. The result is a confounding of relative propensities with relative population sizes. Demographic innumeracy produces a biased model.
This chapter focusses on demographic innumeracies committed in mathematical representations of demographic processes involving multiple interdependent populations and goes on to show how the demographic accounting principles advocated by Stone (1971) can be used to identify some of the misspecifications that are thereby introduced.
Heterogeneity, selection and the definition of rates
As a population composed of heterogeneous subgroups ages, the members with the highest risks of exit from the population leave first. This differential selection can produce exit patterns for the aggregate population that deviate from those of the constituent subpopulations.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Social and Demographic Accounting , pp. 180 - 194Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995