Experiments in the Graduation of the English Life Tables (No. 13) Data

1975 ◽  
Vol 35 ◽  
pp. 281-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. J. McCutcheon ◽  
J. C. Eilbeck

By courtesy of the Government Actuary, the preliminary crude data relating to the proposed English Life Tables (No. 13) were made available to the authors. In this paper various graduations derived from these data “are described and an outline is given of the salient features of each.The investigation covered the calendar years 1970, 1971, and 1972. For each integer x ≥ 2 the values of θx, the number of deaths during the investigation period aged x last birthday at the time of death, and Exc, the corresponding central exposure to risk, were available for both sexes. The central exposures to risk were obtained using population totals from the 1971 national census, by a method similar to that described in Appendix I of reference 4.

1985 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 135-147
Author(s):  
J. J. McCutcheon

By courtesy of the Government Actuary, the preliminary data relating to the proposed English Life Tables (No. 14) were made available to the author. In this paper we describe briefly the graduation of the underlying crude mortality rates by cubic splines and give an outline of the salient features of the graduations finally adopted. Complete details of the English Life Tables are given in reference 1, which also includes historical comparisons.


1929 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 117-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Buchanan

SynopsisWhen interpolations are made between values of a function by any of the ordinary interpolation formulae, there are generally discontinuities in the slope and curvature of the successive interpolation curves, and when, as often happens in practical work, the given values are themselves derived from rough data, these discontinuities may be considerable. To remove these breaks of continuity T. B. Sprague in 1880 devised his osculatory interpolation formula, and in the present Paper is given a brief review of subsequent contributions to the subject. From the practical point of view, the most important of the earlier contributions were those of Mr. 6. King, who successfully applied the method to the construction and graduation of national and other life tables; but while two sets of national life tables have since been constructed on the lines proposed by him, there has, for the last fifteen years, been no further development in this country either in the theory itself or in its application.In contrast to this has been the interest in the method shown by American actuaries, particularly in recent years. Their work is briefly reviewed, and special attention is directed to that of Mr. W. A. Jenkins, who, in 1926, put forward a method of greater generality than that underlying the earlier formulae.The weak point of the osculatory method, regarded as a smoothing agent, rests on the fact that the graduated curve is required to pass through certain predetermined points. The curve will, in fact, be constrained to take a form similar to that assumed by a flexible steel wire which is clamped at fixed points, so that, while the curve is free from discontinuities, any departure of these points from the smooth curve will be reproduced with resulting undulations. To remove this tendency to waviness, Jenkins has devised his modified osculatory method, which, while requiring the successive interpolation curves to have the same slope and curvature at their common points at the ends of each interval, does not require the curves to pass through the points corresponding to the calculated values.His fifth difference formula has been applied to regraduate the English Life Table No. 9, Males, and in connection therewith it is pointed out that the success of the method must depend to some extent on the provision of a good set of guiding values ; for, while the curve is not required to pass through the points corresponding to these values, the closer they lie to the smooth curve the better is the graduated curve likely to be. The method recommended for adoption is one based directly on summations in fiveyear groups of the unadjusted rates of mortality. By means of a formula derived from the modified osculatory formula quinquennial values are obtained. These are treated as first approximations, and the formula is again applied to them in order to produce rates which are treated as the graduated rates. The results are satisfactory both from the point of view of smoothness and of fidelity to the data, as measured by the agreement between actual and expected deaths.An interesting point which emerges from the various graduations and from the comparisons of actual with expected deaths is that the crude rates of mortality appear always to exceed the graduated rates for ages centering about 24, 34 . . . and to fall below them for ages centering about 29, 39 . . . ; and it is suggested that this is due to some persistent tendency to misstatement of age, and that it is also largely responsible for the waviness of graduations of population data which is generally characteristic of the application of the ordinary osculatory method.As a further test of the possibilities of the method, and, in particular, of its smoothing powers, it has been applied to graduate the data of the Government Female Annuitant Experience 1900-1920. These data had proved very intractable to curve-fitting methods, but had been found to show an element of periodicity up to about age 90 with an apparent change in the form of the curve after that age. In connection therewith, formulae are given for applying the method to the data at the ends of the experience where the main method is inapplicable. The result is to produce a curve which is almost perfectly smooth and which closely follows the original data.The method is essentially a graphic method in which the curves are drawn in accordance with mathematical formulae instead of being drawn by hand, and the work is arranged in such a way that it can be carried out practically from beginning to end by purely mechanical processes.


1928 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 125-221 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Murray Laing

The Registrar-General's Decennial Supplement 1921—England and Wales—Part I, recently published, is of more than usual interest. It embodies the Report of the Government Actuary, Sir Alfred Watson, who was invited to undertake the task of preparing National Life Tables in connection with the Census of 1921.In addition to the preparation of English Life Tables No. 9 for Males and Females separately, the only other tables prepared with similar completeness were those relating to Greater London, being the area comprised within the radius of about fifteen miles measured from Charing Cross. On the other hand, the mortality experience of no fewer than twenty-six sections of the country, differentiated by geographical position and density of population, was examined in considerable detail—a feature which, together with others referred to later, distinguishes this investigation from its predecessors.


1981 ◽  
Vol 11 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 13-16
Author(s):  
Chengetai J. M. Zvobgo

Historially two salient features characterized the educational system. It was racially segregated and education for the African majority was largely for exploitation. In this paper, I will review the main features of the educational system in colonial Zimbabwe; the legacy of that system and what the new African Government proposes to do to change it to fit the needs of the new Zimbabwe. The 1899 Education Ordinance had set up two separate systems of education, one for Whites and the other for Blacks. The Ordinance left African education entirely in the hands of Christian missionaries with the government giving small grants to mission schools, provided that these schools were kept open for a minimum of four hours a day, of which not less than two hours were to be devoted to industrial training.


1958 ◽  
Vol 15 (03) ◽  
pp. 155-176
Author(s):  
R. E. Hayward

The Registrar-General's Decennial Supplement, England and Wales, 1951, Life Tables, was published in February of last year. Following the established custom, it includes the report of the Government Actuary, Sir George Maddex, who was asked to prepare National Life Tables showing the level of mortality at the time of the 1951 census. The new life tables are presented in Appendix IV, and it is the aim of this paper to draw attention to the features which are of interest to actuaries concerned with Industrial Life Assurance.


Author(s):  
Dixit Pratik

Abstract In recent decades, India has increasingly felt the need to reduce its dependence on imported crude oil by augmenting domestic production. In such pursuance, India recently enacted the Hydrocarbon Exploration Licensing Policy (HELP) to attract private investments in India’s upstream oil and gas sector. One of the salient features of HELP is the Open Acreage Licensing Policy (OALP), which sought to liberalize auctioning and licensing process of upstream oil and gas sector in India. This article analyses the salient features of the OALP to argue that it has remedied most of the problems associated with previous licensing regimes. Even though India has significantly liberalized the auction and licensing process, the fiscal terms governing the revenue sharing between the operator and the government have served as a deterrent to make India an attractive destination for foreign investors. Therefore, this article suggests that India must offer more attractive fiscal terms to oil companies to incentivize them to undertake the risk of investing in India’s upstream sector.


1973 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 445-455 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melvyn C. Goldstein

One of the most salient features of traditional political life in Tibet was the intense and pervasive competition for power and prestige that took place within the ranks of the politically relevant, particularly within the aristocratic lay-official segment of the government. Plots, disputes, and confiscations were key elements in the dynamics of the system. Although this competition appears, synchronically, to be part of a stable circular process, when the Tibetan political system is viewed diachronically, the apparent stability is seen to be part of a larger, ongoing process of change. Thus, while it is possible to analyze the “structure” of this competition from a synchronic point of view, a diachronic perspective is necessary to understand the forces which have generated it, as well as the overall nature of the system.


2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 247-268
Author(s):  
Aditya Paramita Alhayat

Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mempelajari secara empiris dampak tindakan anti-dumping Indonesia terhadap kinerja impor produk terkait pada periode 1996-2010. Dengan menggunakan model regresi Lee, Park, dan Cui yang dikembangkan pada tahun 2013 ,dampak tindakan anti-dumping dapat dibedakan menjadi efek restriksi dan efek pengalihan perdagangan. Hasil empiris menunjukkan bahwa tindakan anti-dumping tidak efektif dalam memberikan efek restriksi perdagangan dari negara yang menjadi target anti-dumping. Bahkan, impor dari negara yang bukan menjadi target anti-dumping meningkat secara definitif pada tahun ditetapkannya anti-dumping. Secara agregat, efek netto restriksi dan pengalihan perdagangan terbukti mampu menekan impor pada periode investigasi anti-dumping, namun pada periode sesudahnya impor kembali meningkat. Penelitian ini merekomendasikan agar pemerintah mempertimbangkan instrumen kebijakan tindakan pengamanan perdagangan lain yang dapat menekan impor dengan lebih efektif dan bersifat jangka panjang. This study aims to investigate the effects of Indonesia’s anti-dumping actions on import performance of related products during 1996-2010. Utilizing the Lee, Park, dan Cui regression model developed in 2013, the effects of anti-dumping actions can be distinguished into two effects, namely trade restriction and trade diversion. The study shows that anti-dumping measures are not effective in providing trade restriction effect to the targeted countries. In fact, imports from non-targeted countries definitively increased in the year when anti-dumping measures was being set up. The net effects of anti-dumping action are proven to reduce imports during the investigation period, but imports continued to rise afterwards. The study recommends the government to consider other trade remedies policy which could give significant and long term trade restriction effect.


1988 ◽  
Vol 115 (4) ◽  
pp. 721-725
Author(s):  
R. H. Daw

1.1 The publication last year of the English Life Table No. 14 enables my earlier paper (Daw, 1982) to be extended to include the latest table. This paper applied Redington and Michaelson's rx test to E.L.T. Nos. 8 to 13 and the corresponding figures for E.L.T. No. 14 have now been calculated. The Government Actuary's Department kindly supplied me with the unpublished exposed to risk figures which were used.


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