1. Overview

The population projections by marital status are made up of 2 separate sets of projections. One provides projections by legal marital status and the other for (opposite-sex) cohabitation. These are produced using different methodologies that are described briefly below.

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3. Cohort component model by marital status

The single population at the end of a year would be calculated as:

  • single population at the beginning of the year
  • plus births (all assumed to be single) in the year
  • minus marriages in the year
  • minus deaths of single people in the year
  • plus/minus an adjustment for migration of single people in the year

The married population would be calculated as:

  • married population at the beginning of the year
  • plus marriages (of single, divorced and widowed people) in the year
  • minus divorces in the year
  • minus deaths of married people in the year
  • minus people widowed in the year
  • plus/minus an adjustment for migration of married people in the year

The divorced population would be calculated as:

  • divorced population at the beginning of the year
  • plus divorces in the year
  • minus marriages to divorced people in the year
  • minus deaths of divorced people in the year
  • plus/minus an adjustment for migration of divorced people in the year

The widowed population would be calculated as:

  • widowed population at the beginning of the year
  • plus people widowed in the year
  • minus marriages to widowed people in the year
  • minus deaths of widowed people in the year
  • plus/minus an adjustment for migration of widowed people in the year
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5. Cohabitation projections

Details about methods used to produce the cohabitation estimates used as a basis for these projections can be found in the article "Estimating the cohabiting population (128 Kb Pdf) " by Ben Wilson.

Ideally, projections of de facto marital status (cohabitation) would also be produced using a component methodology that includes transitions into and out of cohabitation within such a model. However, whereas detailed historical data on transitions between legal marital status categories are readily available from registration data, data on cohabitation formation and dissolution are very limited. Theoretically, estimates could be made from sample surveys; however, in practice, the data is not of sufficient quality for this purpose. In particular, sample sizes are far too small to produce reliable data for individual ages. As the model used for the legal marital status projections is a dynamic model, assumptions made about cohabitation transitions would affect the results for legal marital status. It would therefore be likely that the inclusion of necessarily speculative data on cohabitation would actually reduce the quality of the legal marital status projections.

Instead, assumptions have been made about the proportions cohabiting in each age/sex/legal marital status group and these have been applied to the results of the legal marital status projections. These proportions change over the projection period; more details about this can be found in documentation published with the marital status population projections.

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6. Variant projections

Variant projections are produced using the same method as that described above but the assumptions made about future marriage and divorce rates, or cohabitation proportions, gradually diverge from those assumed for the principal projection. The level of divergence from the principal assumptions can vary for different components reflecting where there is greater uncertainty in the trend or if it is suspected that a turning point has been reached. The level of divergence applied for each variant is discussed with external experts and reviewed by the statistician responsible for the projections.

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