eprintid: 14154 rev_number: 5 eprint_status: archive userid: 5 dir: disk0/00/01/41/54 datestamp: 2016-12-14 11:14:16 lastmod: 2021-08-27 17:28:16 status_changed: 2016-12-14 11:14:16 type: article metadata_visibility: show item_issues_count: 2 creators_name: Keyfitz, N. creators_id: AL0190 title: The profile of Intercohort increase ispublished: pub divisions: prog_pop abstract: For tracing the growth of populations over past time a useful indicator is cohort size. While a cohort moves through time, and therefore cannot be counted in the same way as the population of any given moment, yet its size can be measured as births less deaths up to some intermediate age. This may be estimated from a series of censuses, without reference to vital statistics or other data. The technique is applied to the onset of the world wide population expansion that followed World War II. In several Asian countries it took place in a single five‐year period with a multiplication of earlier intercohort increases by as much as threefold. The jump occurred early in Burma, late in Indonesia, and suddenly in both of those countries; in India it was more gradual, so that the onset of the current population expansion is less sharply marked. Calculation also shows a corresponding discontinuity in the rate of population change after World War I in a number of countries, but of lesser magnitude. Insofar as one may speak of a population explosion occurring in the world today the method of intercohort increase identifies its date of onset as immediately after World War II. date: 1990 date_type: published publisher: Taylor and Francis id_number: 10.1080/08898489009525297 creators_browse_id: 2026 full_text_status: none publication: Mathematical Population Studies volume: 2 number: 2 pagerange: 105-117 refereed: TRUE issn: 0889-8480 coversheets_dirty: FALSE fp7_type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article citation: Keyfitz, N. (1990). The profile of Intercohort increase. Mathematical Population Studies 2 (2) 105-117. 10.1080/08898489009525297 .