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Scenarios, uncertainty and conditional forecasts of the world population
Author(s): Alho JM
Source: JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL STATISTICAL SOCIETY SERIES A-STATISTICS IN SOCIETY    Volume: 160    Pages: 71-85    Part: Part 1    Published: 1997  
Times Cited: 18     References: 33     
Abstract: Current official population forecasts differ little from those that Whelpton made 50 years ago either in the cohort-component methodology used or in the arguments used to motivate the assumptions. However, Whelpton produced some of the most erroneous forecasts of this century. This suggests that current forecasters should ensure that they give users an assessment of the uncertainty of their forecasts. We show how simple statistical methods can be combined with expert judgment to arrive at an overall predictive distribution for the future population. We apply the methods to a world population forecast that was made in 1994. Accepting that point forecast, we find that the probability is only about 2% that the world population in the year 2030 will be less than the low scenario of 8317 million. The probability that the world population will exceed the high scenario of 10736 million is about 13%. Similarly, the probability is only about 51% that the high-low interval of a recent United Nations (UN) forecast will contain the true population in the year 2025. Even if we consider the UN high-low intervals as conditional on the possible future policies of its member states, they appear to have a relatively small probability of encompassing the future population.
Document Type: Article
Language: English
Reprint Address: Alho, JM (reprint author), UNIV JOENSUU, DEPT STAT, POB 111, JOENSUU 80101, FINLAND
Publisher: BLACKWELL PUBL LTD, 108 COWLEY RD, OXFORD, OXON, ENGLAND OX4 1JF
Subject Category: Social Sciences, Mathematical Methods; Statistics & Probability
IDS Number: XB039
ISSN: 0035-9238
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