2022
DOI: 10.3390/forecast4010021
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Prevalence and Economic Costs of Absenteeism in an Aging Population—A Quasi-Stochastic Projection for Germany

Abstract: Demographic change is leading to the aging of German society. As long as the baby boom cohorts are still of working age, the working population will also age—and decline as soon as this baby boom generation gradually reaches retirement age. At the same time, there has been a trend toward increasing absenteeism (times of inability to work) in companies since the zero years, with the number of days of absence increasing with age. We present a novel stochastic forecast approach that combines population forecastin… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Japan has entered a hyper-aged culture and is one of the nations with the greatest rates of population aging in the world, with 27% of the population being over 65 [1]. Germany's population is one of the oldest in Europe with a proportion of 21.12% [2]. China's aging problem is equally serious.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Japan has entered a hyper-aged culture and is one of the nations with the greatest rates of population aging in the world, with 27% of the population being over 65 [1]. Germany's population is one of the oldest in Europe with a proportion of 21.12% [2]. China's aging problem is equally serious.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This model generates 1000 trajectories for the year-end population in each age group (0-95+) and both sexes through Monte Carlo simulations. In these trajectories, the population aged a, of sex g, and in year y is computed as shown in Equation ( 4) [59].…”
Section: Population Forecast Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…MCS is a well-established approach for stochastic forecasting since it is relatively easy to apply and efficient while still being theoretically justified (since it is based on an underlying mathematical model [55]). In the case of stochastic demographic forecasting, MCS has been applied to incorporate future uncertainty in a variety of forecast problems, such as fertility [1], mortality [56], migration [11], labor market supply [2], pension demand [3], absenteeism [4], long-term care demand [5], or causal analysis [19]. Figure 5 illustrates the past development of the Regional Tempo Index and its prediction with a 75% prediction interval (PI) according to (12).…”
Section: Stochastic Forecast Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fertility is a major component that shapes a society's long-term demographic development [1]. Demographics, in turn, have major implications for long-term planning in a variety of fields, such as the labor market [2], pensions [3], health insurance [4], long-term care [5], education [6], and housing [7]. Therefore, the long-term forecasting of fertility trends is essential for sound economic or political planning [1].…”
Section: Introduction 1background and Motivationmentioning
confidence: 99%