# 



|||||Page|
|---|---|---|---|---|
|Report ofthe Trustees||||2 to 8|
|Rcport ofthe Independent<br>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<br>1 —Activities||during the|year|26 to 27|
|Appendix 2 —Index to||Population|Studies, Vol. 75 2021|28 to 3E|





# 

# 

# 



# 

## 

## 



## 

# 

## 

## 



## 

## 

## 

## 

## 



# 

# 

## 



## 

# 

## 



## 

## 

## 

## 




## 

## 

## 



## 

## 

## 



## 



## 

## 

## 

|||~|fi|||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
||||||||||~||8|~||||
||~||V.|||||||||||||
||4||~||~|||||||I||||
||||I|t))||||||I||II|I|I||
||||||||'|||||||||
|||||~|||||~||5||II|I i||
||||Ilk|45||l||||I||&I|I|||
|~|F|||||||||||||||
||||~|||||||||||||
|||||I I|t|||0||i|I|||||
||||||||||||||||~ ~|





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<br>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<br>activities||||(1,172)|(29,589)|
|Change in cash and. cash <br>'|equivaleats|in the||(1,172)|(29,589)|
|r<br>g period||||||
|Cash and cash equivalents<br>ofthe reporting period|at the begmning|||147,991|177,580|
|Cash and cash equivalents|at the end|ofthe||146,819|147,991|
|reporting<br>period||||||





## 




## 

## 

## 

## 

## 



## 

## 

## 

## 

## 

## 

## 



## 

## 

## 

|ROYALTY|||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
||||||2021|2020|
|Taylor arid Francis<br>ASTOR royalty|||||1].0,223<br>ll 737|I06,793<br>8,120|
|||||||114,9I3|
||INCOME||||||
||||||2020|20]9|
||||||K||
|Interest receivable|||||2,993|3,333|
|POPULATION||STUDIES|||||
||||||Total|Total|
||||||2021|2020|
|Staffcosts<br>Office re~tal|||||37,855|37,62'|
|Editorial expenses <br>Lsurm.ce||and fees|||42,433|32,984<br>39|
|Te)ephone|||||102|174|
|Printing,<br>postage|and stationery||||53|)33|
|Auditors<br>remuneration<br>General expenses|||||1,650|1,6SO<br>108|
|Depreciation|||||||
||||||82,093|72~09|
|GRANTS PAYABLE|||||||
||||||2021|2020|
|Grits payable|||||L,<br>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|





## 

## 

## 

## 




## 

## 

## 

||err|err|r|~||||e|||||I II|~|I|||i|~I||II||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|||||||I|||||i||'I||4||||||||||
||~|||s||e||~|qs||||||||||||||||
|||||||||I|I||||||||||||||||
|~|~||||||||||||||||||||||||
|I|~|||II||||||||I|el||||||||||||
||||||||||'|i||I '||~|||||~|~|||||
||)||'|I|'||~|rr'|I|||['I|||||||||||||
|||f||8|||II|||||||~ l|||||||~|I|||
||||||||||~ll|||e-I|~P:|5 '||'|I|~|||||||
|||||'tl|||'|wl|~X||I||||||||||||||
||II|~||II||I||E||ti|||||||||||||||
|F|||||||||||||||||||||||||
||~||||||||||||||||||||||||
||||||||||||||||||||||||II|~ ~|





## 

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





## 

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





## 

## 

## 



## 



# 

# 

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





## 

|Educational<br>composition<br>and parity contribution<br>to completed<br>cohort fertility change|
|---|
|in low-fertility<br>settings<br>Pster Lazzari<br>Ryohei Mogi &Vladimir Canudas<br>Ro-mo<br>153-167|
|Children ofthe (gender) revolution:<br>A theoretical<br>and empirical<br>synthesis of how|
|gendered<br>division oflabour influences<br>fertility<br>Alyce Raybould &Rebecca Sear<br>169-190|
|Fortunes ofDragons: Cohort size effects on life outcomes<br>Sumi tAgarwal,<br>Wenlan gian, Tien Foo Sing &noh Lin Tan<br>191-207|
|Migratioa for family ami labour market outcomes<br>in Sweden<br>Brian Joseph Gillespie,<br>Clara H. Mulder &Michael J. Thomas<br>209-219|
|Unequally<br>ageing regions ofEurope: Exploring the role ofurbanization<br>Iiya Kashnitsky,<br>Joop De Beer &Leo Van Wissen<br>221-237|
|Foetal loss and feminine<br>sex ratios at birth in sub-Saharan<br>Africa<br>Anne Morse &Nancy Luke<br>239-254|
|Using future age profiles to improve<br>immigration<br>projections<br>Tejre SkJerpen &Mariatme<br>Tuttmessen<br>255-267|
|Errors<br>im repohed ages md dates in surveys ofadult mortality:<br>A record linkage|
|study in Niakhar (Senegal)<br>Bruno Masquelier,<br>Mufaro Kanyangatara,<br>Gilles Pison, Almamy Malick Kante<br>Cheikh<br>Tidiane Ndraye, Laetitia Douiilot,<br>Geraldt'ne Duthe<br>CheilCh Sokhna,<br>Valeri eOelaunay &Stephane Hellertnger<br>269-287|
|When is fertility too low or too high? Population<br>policy preferences ofdemographers|
|arom, d the world<br>Hendrik P van Dalen &Kene Henkens<br>289-303|
|Issue 3;Noverubcr 2021|
|Social class and fertility. A long-run<br>analysis of Southern<br>Sweden,<br>1922—2015<br>Martin Dribe & Christopher D. Smith<br>305-323|
|Reproductive<br>transitions<br>and women's<br>status in Indian households<br>&cga+N Reed<br>325-341|
|Evaluating<br>the impact ofhousing<br>market liberalization<br>on the timing ofmarriage.|
|Evidence from Egypt<br>Ragui Assaad, Caroline %rahu &l7ominique JRolando.<br>343-361|
|The list experiment:<br>An approach to measuring<br>stigmatized<br>behaviours<br>related to<br>sex-selective<br>abortion<br>Emily Treleaven,<br>Toan Ngoc Pham, Anh Duy lYguyen &Aadla DiamondSmith-<br>363-3RO|





|Height and health in late eighteenth-century<br>England<br>IlaizrzaIiis Jaadla, Leigh Shaw Ta-ylor X Romola Davenport|||381-40I|
|---|---|---|---|
|Estimation ofolder-adult<br>mortality<br>from information<br>distorted<br>by systematic|age|||
|misreporting<br>Alberto Palloni<br>Hiram Beltran San-chez & Guido Pinto|||403-420|
|Multidimensional<br>healthy<br>life expectancy ofthe older population<br>in China<br>Guogui Huang<br>Fei Guo &Gong Chen|||421-442|
|Life expectancy inequalities<br>in Hungary<br>over 25 years: The role ofavoidable<br>Aniko Biro, Tamas Hjadu, Gabor Kertesi &Daniel Prinz||deaths|443-455|
|Did sexual behaviour<br>differences<br>between HIV infection and treatment<br>groups||||
|offset the preventative<br>biological effects of ART roll-out in Zimbabwe' ?<br>Simon Gregson & Constance Ayamukapa|||457-476|
|The persistently<br>high fertility ofaNorth American<br>population:<br>A 25-year restudy||||
|ofparity among the Ohio Amish<br>Samson<br>Wasao, Cory Anderson<br>cC: Christian Mpody|||477-486|
|Supplement 1:Dex nber 2021-75 years ofPopulation<br>Studies'.A.diamond<br>anniversary<br>special issue. Guest edited by Wendy Sigle, Alice Reid, Rebecca||Seat||
|Foreword: 75 years ofPopulation<br>Studies: A diamond<br>anniversary<br>special issue<br>Wendy Sigle, Ali ceReid&Rebecca Sear|||1-5|
|Population<br>Studies at 75 years. An empirical<br>review<br>Mehnda C Mi1ls& Charles Rahal|||7-25|
|Moving towards the centre or the exit? Migration<br>in population<br>studies and|in|||
|Population<br>Studies 1996—2021<br>Ronald Skeldon|||27-45|
|llas demography<br>witnessed<br>a data revolution?<br>Promises<br>and pitfalls ofa changing||||
|data ecosystem<br>Ridhi Kashyap'|||47-75|
|Demographic<br>perspectives<br>in research on global environmental<br>change<br>Raya Muttarak|||77-104|
|What have we learned about mortality<br>patterns<br>over the past 25 years'?<br>Alyson A. van Raalte|||105-132|
|Theory and explanation<br>in demography<br>The case oflow fertility<br>in Europe<br>Elspeth Grahatn|||&33-155|
|Why a long-term<br>perspective<br>is beneficial for demographers<br>A 1I'ce Reid|||157-177|
|Not the great equalizers<br>Covid-19, 1918—20 influenza,<br>and the need for a|pamkgm|||
|shift in pandemic<br>preparedness<br>Svenn Ertk Mamelund &-JessicaDimka|||179-199|





|Demography<br>and the rise, apparent<br>fall, and resurgence <br>Rebecca Sear|Demography<br>and the rise, apparent<br>fall, and resurgence <br>Rebecca Sear|ofeugenics|ofeugenics||201-220|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|What's so troubling<br>about 'voluntary'<br>Eishi ta Nandagiri|family planning|anyway?|A feminist|perspective|221-234|
|Demography's<br>theory and approach.|(How) has the view from||the margins|changed'?||
|8'endy Sigle|||||235-251|
|Anerword:<br>Looking to the future of <br>John fermi sch|Population<br>Studies||||253-254|



