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2021-12-31-accounts

Page
Report ofthe Trustees 2 to 8
Rcport ofthe Independent
Auditors
9to 11
Statcmeot ofFinancial Activities
Balance Sheet 13
Cash Flow Statement E4 to 15
Notes to the Financial Statements 16to 23
Detailed Statement of Financial Activities 24to25
Appendix
1 —Activities
during the year 26 to 27
Appendix 2 —Index to Population Studies, Vol. 75 2021 28 to 3E

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POPULATION INVESTIGATION COMMrrrEE Balance Sheet at 31 December 2021 2021 Restricted Unrestricted Total funds funds fLmds 2020 Total funds Notes FIXED ASSETS Tangible assets Invcstmcnts 10 102,023 102,023 89,300 102,023 102,023 89,300 CURRwf ASSETS Debtors Cash at bank and in hand Investments - COTF & fixed tern] bonds 11 31,632 31,632 85,444 85,444 61. 375 61,375 31,956 38,410 109,581 178,451 178,451 179,947 CREDrroRS Amounts falling due within one year 12 (46,143) (46,143) (33,999) NET CURRENT ASSETS LESS 132,308 132,308 145,948 234,331 234,331 235,248 NET ASSETS 234,331 234,331 235,248 FUNDS 13 Unrestricted funds Nominatcd funds Restricted fi]nds TOTAL F￿NDs 224,870 218,669 9,461 16,579 234,331 235,248 The financial stat¢mcnts w¢r¢ approved by the Board of Trustccs on . signed on its behalf by" Dr. T. Leone - Hon. Tr¢asurer Profes Sig ~ Chair 13

202I 2020
Notes
Cash Qows &on activities:
Cash generated
from operations
4,165) 32,922)
Net cash provided by (used in) operatmg
activities (4,165) (32,922)
Cash flows from investing activities:
Interest received 2,993 3 333
Net cash provided by (used in) investing
activities
(1,172) (29,589)
Change in cash and. cash
'
equivaleats in the (1,172) (29,589)
r
g period
Cash and cash equivalents
ofthe reporting period
at the begmning 147,991 177,580
Cash and cash equivalents at the end ofthe 146,819 147,991
reporting
period

ROYALTY
2021 2020
Taylor arid Francis
ASTOR royalty
1].0,223
ll 737
I06,793
8,120
114,9I3
INCOME
2020 20]9
K
Interest receivable 2,993 3,333
POPULATION STUDIES
Total Total
2021 2020
Staffcosts
Office re~tal
37,855 37,62'
Editorial expenses
Lsurm.ce
and fees 42,433 32,984
39
Te)ephone 102 174
Printing,
postage
and stationery 53 )33
Auditors
remuneration
General expenses
1,650 1,6SO
108
Depreciation
82,093 72~09
GRANTS PAYABLE
2021 2020
Grits payable L,
45,000
45,0013
The total grant paid to institutions during the year was as folios:
2021' 2020
British Society for Population Studies 8,500

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Notes to the FimLncial Stabmettts - continued Notes to the FimLncial Stabmettts - continued
forQe year ended 31I:leeetnber 2G21
9. TANGIBLE FDXDASSETS
Computer
eqmpment
COST
At
1 January 2021 and
31 December 2021 633
DEPRECIATION
At 1 January 2021 and 31 December 2021 633
NET BOOKVALUE
At 31December 2020 and 31December 2021
10. FIXEDASSETINVES
Listed
investments
TVALUE
At
1 January 2021
89,300
Disposals
Revaluations 12,723
At 31December 2021 102,023
NET BOOKVALUE
At 31December 2020 89,300
At 31 December 2021 102,023
There were no investment assets outside the UK.

2021 2020
Other debtors 31,632 31,956
12. CREDITORS: AMOUNTS F GDUE
2021 2020
Other Creditors 46,143 33,999

2021 2020
INCOMING RESOURCES
Activities for generating
Taylor and Francis
JSTOR royalty
Rnds 110,223
8,737
106,793
8,120
118,960 114,913
Investment
income
Interest receivable
2,993 3,333
Total incomung resources 121,953 118,246
RESOURCES EXPENDED
Charitable
expenditure
Salaries
Postage, printing
and stationery
Editor's fees
Editorial expenses
37,855
53
16,000
26,433
37,621
$33
16,000
16,984
39
Insurance 102 174
Telephone
Auditor's
remuneration
1,650 1,650
108
General expenses
82,093 72,709
Charitable
activities
Grants to institutions
Grants to individuals
8,500
45,000
8,500
45,000
53,500 S3,500

202I 2020
Total resourims
expended
135,593 126,209
Net mcorne/(expenditure)
before gaims
and losses
(13,640) (7,963)
Realised recognised gains and losses
Realised gains/losses
on fixed asset investments
12,723 5,391
Net income/(expenditure) 917 L2,572)

INDEX to Population
Studies, Volunl 75, 2021:
In order ofpublication;
Issue 1:March 2021
Thanks to reviewers
The politics ofageing and rehrement:
Evidence from Swiss referenda
Pier@BehoL Viaeeazo Ga(astro
Trust and fertility in uncertain
times
Amstein Aassve, Marco EeMoglie &Eetizia Mencarini
Disentangling
the effects of reproductive
behaviours
and fertility preferences
on
child growth
in India
lVtd Juel Eana, John Cleland,
TVSekher N
S. abu S.Padmadas
Children's
education ~d parental
old-age health: Evidence from aPopo]atio~-based,
nationally
representative
study in India
Berenike Thoma, Nikkil Sudharsanan,
Omar Karlsson,
R'illi am Joe,
S.V. Subr&tmanian &Jan Walter DeN-eve
Global and local correlations ofHajnal's
household
formation
markers
in historical
Europe. A cautionary
tale
AfiLolg Wot tyseA', Bsrtosz Ogorek N Sic~Wed Gruber
Families in comparison:
An individual-level
comparison
oflife-course
and family
reconstructions
between population
and vital event registers
Niels van den Berg, lngrj'dK.
van Dijon; RickJ. Mourjts, P Eline Slagboom,
Angeli que A P. O.Janssens ckKees Mandemakers
Labour market incorporation
ofinunigrant
women
in South Africa: Impacts
of
human
capital and family structure
Emmanuel
Souza
Partnership
transitions
among the children ofitnmigrants
in Norway:
The role
ofpartner choice
Kenneth Aarskaug
Wiik Lars Dorrnmermuth
&Jennifer AHolland.

Educational
composition
and parity contribution
to completed
cohort fertility change
in low-fertility
settings
Pster Lazzari
Ryohei Mogi &Vladimir Canudas
Ro-mo
153-167
Children ofthe (gender) revolution:
A theoretical
and empirical
synthesis of how
gendered
division oflabour influences
fertility
Alyce Raybould &Rebecca Sear
169-190
Fortunes ofDragons: Cohort size effects on life outcomes
Sumi tAgarwal,
Wenlan gian, Tien Foo Sing &noh Lin Tan
191-207
Migratioa for family ami labour market outcomes
in Sweden
Brian Joseph Gillespie,
Clara H. Mulder &Michael J. Thomas
209-219
Unequally
ageing regions ofEurope: Exploring the role ofurbanization
Iiya Kashnitsky,
Joop De Beer &Leo Van Wissen
221-237
Foetal loss and feminine
sex ratios at birth in sub-Saharan
Africa
Anne Morse &Nancy Luke
239-254
Using future age profiles to improve
immigration
projections
Tejre SkJerpen &Mariatme
Tuttmessen
255-267
Errors
im repohed ages md dates in surveys ofadult mortality:
A record linkage
study in Niakhar (Senegal)
Bruno Masquelier,
Mufaro Kanyangatara,
Gilles Pison, Almamy Malick Kante
Cheikh
Tidiane Ndraye, Laetitia Douiilot,
Geraldt'ne Duthe
CheilCh Sokhna,
Valeri eOelaunay &Stephane Hellertnger
269-287
When is fertility too low or too high? Population
policy preferences ofdemographers
arom, d the world
Hendrik P van Dalen &Kene Henkens
289-303
Issue 3;Noverubcr 2021
Social class and fertility. A long-run
analysis of Southern
Sweden,
1922—2015
Martin Dribe & Christopher D. Smith
305-323
Reproductive
transitions
and women's
status in Indian households
&cga+N Reed
325-341
Evaluating
the impact ofhousing
market liberalization
on the timing ofmarriage.
Evidence from Egypt
Ragui Assaad, Caroline %rahu &l7ominique JRolando.
343-361
The list experiment:
An approach to measuring
stigmatized
behaviours
related to
sex-selective
abortion
Emily Treleaven,
Toan Ngoc Pham, Anh Duy lYguyen &Aadla DiamondSmith-
363-3RO
Height and health in late eighteenth-century
England
IlaizrzaIiis Jaadla, Leigh Shaw Ta-ylor X Romola Davenport
381-40I
Estimation ofolder-adult
mortality
from information
distorted
by systematic
age
misreporting
Alberto Palloni
Hiram Beltran San-chez & Guido Pinto
403-420
Multidimensional
healthy
life expectancy ofthe older population
in China
Guogui Huang
Fei Guo &Gong Chen
421-442
Life expectancy inequalities
in Hungary
over 25 years: The role ofavoidable
Aniko Biro, Tamas Hjadu, Gabor Kertesi &Daniel Prinz
deaths 443-455
Did sexual behaviour
differences
between HIV infection and treatment
groups
offset the preventative
biological effects of ART roll-out in Zimbabwe' ?
Simon Gregson & Constance Ayamukapa
457-476
The persistently
high fertility ofaNorth American
population:
A 25-year restudy
ofparity among the Ohio Amish
Samson
Wasao, Cory Anderson
cC: Christian Mpody
477-486
Supplement 1:Dex nber 2021-75 years ofPopulation
Studies'.A.diamond
anniversary
special issue. Guest edited by Wendy Sigle, Alice Reid, Rebecca
Seat
Foreword: 75 years ofPopulation
Studies: A diamond
anniversary
special issue
Wendy Sigle, Ali ceReid&Rebecca Sear
1-5
Population
Studies at 75 years. An empirical
review
Mehnda C Mi1ls& Charles Rahal
7-25
Moving towards the centre or the exit? Migration
in population
studies and
in
Population
Studies 1996—2021
Ronald Skeldon
27-45
llas demography
witnessed
a data revolution?
Promises
and pitfalls ofa changing
data ecosystem
Ridhi Kashyap'
47-75
Demographic
perspectives
in research on global environmental
change
Raya Muttarak
77-104
What have we learned about mortality
patterns
over the past 25 years'?
Alyson A. van Raalte
105-132
Theory and explanation
in demography
The case oflow fertility
in Europe
Elspeth Grahatn
&33-155
Why a long-term
perspective
is beneficial for demographers
A 1I'ce Reid
157-177
Not the great equalizers
Covid-19, 1918—20 influenza,
and the need for a
pamkgm
shift in pandemic
preparedness
Svenn Ertk Mamelund &-JessicaDimka
179-199
Demography
and the rise, apparent
fall, and resurgence
Rebecca Sear
Demography
and the rise, apparent
fall, and resurgence
Rebecca Sear
ofeugenics ofeugenics 201-220
What's so troubling
about 'voluntary'
Eishi ta Nandagiri
family planning anyway? A feminist perspective 221-234
Demography's
theory and approach.
(How) has the view from the margins changed'?
8'endy Sigle 235-251
Anerword:
Looking to the future of
John fermi sch
Population
Studies
253-254