Does the Mortality of Individuals with Severe Disabilities Contribute to the Persistent East–West Mortality Gap Among German Men?

被引:0
作者
Olga Grigoriev
Gabriele Doblhammer
机构
[1] Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research,Institute for Sociology and Demography
[2] University of Rostock,undefined
[3] German Center for Neurodegenerative Disease,undefined
来源
European Journal of Population | 2022年 / 38卷
关键词
Mortality; Disability pension; Regional differences; Germany;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
After three decades since reunification male life expectancy in East Germany still lags behind that of West Germany. Unlike most of the prior studies focusing on the role of socioeconomic factors, this study aims at assessing the contribution of the population with severe disabilities to the persistent East–West male mortality gap. Our analysis is mainly based on the German Pension Fund data. It is restricted to men aged 30–59 receiving disability pension (DP). We estimate mortality indicators and compare trends among populations with or without DP. We use decomposition method to quantify the effects of changes in mortality and compositional changed in the prevalence of receiving DP on the East–West mortality difference. The analysis covers the period 1995–2013. The German Socioeconomic Panel data and Cox proportional hazard models are used to evaluate the regional differences in the risk of receiving DP. Our results suggest that both the higher prevalence of receiving DP in the East and the higher mortality level among men not receiving DP in the East explain the East–West gap. The mortality difference among those receiving DP is negligible and does not contribute much to it. The observed higher prevalence in receiving DP in the East is very likely to reflect the reality as we found no regional differences in the risk of transitioning to receiving DP. The disadvantageous position of the East can be explained by the post-reunification crisis which particularly hit young men in the 1990s, selective migration from East to West after reunification, and the higher proportion of the healthier foreign population living in the West.
引用
收藏
页码:247 / 271
页数:24
相关论文
共 95 条
[1]  
Andersson G(2017)Long-distance migration and mortality in Sweden: Testing the Salmon bias and healthy migrant hypotheses Population, Space and Place 23 e2032-522
[2]  
Drefahl S(2002)Algorithm for decomposition of differences between aggregate demographic measures and its application to life expectancies, healthy life expectancies, parity-progression ratios and total fertility rates Demographic Research 7 499-421
[3]  
Andreev EM(2004)Pension reform in Germany: The impact on retirement decisions FinanzArchiv 60 393-164
[4]  
Shkolnikov VM(2014)Diagnosis-specific disability pension and risk of all-cause and cause-specific mortality—a cohort study of 4.9 million inhabitants in Sweden BMC Public Health 14 1247-906
[5]  
Begun AZ(2009)Time to retire—time to die? A prospective cohort study of the effects of early retirement on long-term survival Social Science and Medicine 69 160-110
[6]  
Berkel B(2013)Reversing early retirement in Germany. A longitudinal alanysis of the effects of recent pension reforms on the timing of the transition to retirement and on pension incomes Comparative Population Studies 38 881-738
[7]  
Börsch-Supan A(2008)Mögliche Faktoren für die rasche Reduktion der ostdeutschen Übersterblichkeit nach der Wiedervereinigung. Warum leben Ostdeutsche seit der Wiedervereinigung länger? Zeitschrift für Bevölkerungswissenschaft 33 89-731
[8]  
Björkenstam C(2009)Who stays, who goes, who returns? East–West migration within Germany since reunification Economics of Transition 17 703-138
[9]  
Alexanderson K(2019)Changing educational gradient in long-term care-free life expectancy among German men, 1997–2012 PLoS One 14 e0222842-195
[10]  
Björkenstam E(2017)Health convergence between East and West Germany as reflected in long-term cause-specific mortality trends: To what extent was it due to reunification? European Journal of Population 33 701-216