This paper presents a relational model of age-specific death rates at
ages 45-99. It is based upon death rates calculated for single years o
f age and five-year periods from 1950 to 1985 in 16 low-mortality coun
tries. Eighty-two data sets are used in the construction of the model.
These data passed a rigorous quality test which involved comparisons
of intercensal changes in cohort size with intercensal deaths. Constru
ction of the model is based upon a logit transformation of death rates
, which performed slightly better than a logarithmic transformation in
statistical tests. A 'standard' mortality pattern is produced as a su
mmary of age-specific death rates in these 82 data sets. Expressed in
logits, the standard is highly linear in age for males. For females, s
ystematic curvature of the type first identified by Horiuchi and Coale
is observed. The proportionate rate of change in women's age-specific
death rates is highest in the age group 70-80. Once this pattern has
been embodied in the standard, we are generally more successful in pre
dicting death rates for females than for males in the 82 populations b
y means of a two-parameter linear transformation of the standard. Thus
, the value of using the relational model relative to Gompertz or logi
stic representations of age patterns is much greater for females than
for males. Over time in a particular country, the parameter which repr
esents the level of mortality, alpha, has generally fallen for both se
xes and faster for females. The value of the slope parameter, beta, ha
s also typically fallen, reflecting larger gains in logits of age-spec
ific death rates at the very old than at younger old ages. This trend
casts doubt on the validity of the 'rectangularizing survival curve' a
s a representation of old-age mortality trends. We conclude that there
is little evidence of regional clustering in values of beta, which su
ggests that regional model life tables are losing utility as a tool fo
r the study of old-age mortality in low-mortality countries. We demons
trate how the relational model can be used graphically to identify nat
ional idiosyncracies in old-age mortality. In addition, we show that d
ata that failed our earlier quality check typically begin to exhibit a
n irregular pattern of deviations from the standard around the ages at
which the data deteriorate.