Abstract

We sought to investigate to what extent worldwide improvements in mortality over the past 50 years have been accompanied by convergence in the mortality experience of the world's population. We have adopted a novel approach to the objective measurement of global mortality convergence. The global mortality distribution at a point in time is quantified using a dispersion measure of mortality (DMM). Trends in the DMM indicate global mortality convergence and divergence. The analysis uses United Nations data for 1950-2000 for all 152 countries with populations of at least 1 million in 2000 (99.7% of the world's population in 2000). The DMM for life expectancy at birth declined until the late 1980s but has since increased, signalling a shift from global convergence to divergence in life expectancy at birth. In contrast, the DMM for infant mortality indicates continued convergence since 1950. The switch in the late 1980s from the global convergence of life expectancy at birth to divergence indicates that progress in reducing mortality differences between many populations is now more than offset by the scale of reversals in adult mortality in others. Global progress needs to be judged on whether mortality convergence can be re-established and indeed accelerated.

Keywords

Life expectancyConvergence (economics)Mortality rateDivergence (linguistics)DemographyPopulationInfant mortalityGeographyEconomicsEconomic growthSociology

MeSH Terms

Global HealthHealth Status IndicatorsHumansLife ExpectancyMortalityTime Factors

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
83
Issue
3
Pages
11-25
Citations
212
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

212
OpenAlex
4
Influential
9
CrossRef

Cite This

Kath Moser, Vladimir M. Shkolnikov, David A. Leon (2007). World Mortality 1950–2000: Divergence Replaces Convergence from the Late 1980s. HIV, Resurgent Infections and Population Change in Africa , 83 (3) , 11-25. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6174-5_1

Identifiers

DOI
10.1007/978-1-4020-6174-5_1
PMID
15798844
PMCID
PMC2624202

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%