Actuarial Tables and the Math Behind Life Expectancy Estimates
Life expectancy is not a prediction. It is a statistical average calculated from mortality tables, and understanding how those tables work changes how you think about the number. What life expectan...

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Life expectancy is not a prediction. It is a statistical average calculated from mortality tables, and understanding how those tables work changes how you think about the number. What life expectancy actually means When someone says life expectancy at birth in the US is 77.5 years, they are saying: if you took a large group of people born today and subjected them to the current age-specific death rates for every year of their lives, the average age at death would be 77.5. This is called "period life expectancy." It uses today's mortality rates, not future ones. It does not account for medical advances, changes in lifestyle, or pandemics. It is a snapshot of current conditions applied across an entire hypothetical lifetime. "Cohort life expectancy" tries to project future mortality improvements and is typically higher, but it requires assumptions about how medicine and society will evolve. Most published life expectancy figures use the period method because it requires no forecasting. H