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The evolution of death rates and life expectancy in Denmark

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  • Søren Jarner
  • Esben Kryger
  • Chresten Dengsøe

Abstract

From 1835 to date Denmark has experienced an increase in life expectancy at birth of about 40 years for both sexes. Over the course of the last 170 years, life expectancy at birth has increased from 40 to 80 years for women and from 36 to 76 years for men, and it continues to rise. Using a new methodology, we show that about half of the total historic increase can be attributed to the sharp decline in infant and young age death rates up to 1950. However, life expectancy gains from 1950 to date can be primarily attributed to improvements in the age-specific death rates for the age group from 50 to 80, although there is also a noticeable contribution from the further decline in infant mortality over this period. With age-specific death rates up to age 60 now at a very low absolute level, substantial future life expectancy improvements must necessarily arise from improvements in age-specific death rates for ages 60 and above. Using the developed methodology, we quantify the impact of further reductions in age-specific mortality. Despite being one of countries with the highest life expectancy at the beginning of the 20th century, and despite the spectacular historic increase in life expectancy since then, Denmark is, in fact, lagging behind compared to many other countries, notably the other Nordic countries. The main reason is an alarming excess mortality for cause-specific death rates related to ischaemic heart diseases and, in particular, a number of cancer diseases. Age-specific death rates continue to improve in most countries, and a likely scenario is that in the future Denmark will experience improvement rates at the international level or perhaps even higher as a result of a catch-up effect.

Suggested Citation

  • Søren Jarner & Esben Kryger & Chresten Dengsøe, 2008. "The evolution of death rates and life expectancy in Denmark," Scandinavian Actuarial Journal, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 2008(2-3), pages 147-173.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:sactxx:v:2008:y:2008:i:2-3:p:147-173
    DOI: 10.1080/03461230802079193
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    Cited by:

    1. Ana Debon & Steven Haberman & Gabriella Piscopo, 2024. "Multipopulation mortality analysis: bringing out the unobservable with latent clustering," Quality & Quantity: International Journal of Methodology, Springer, vol. 58(6), pages 5107-5123, December.

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