Mortality from the influenza pandemic of 1918-19 in Indonesia
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van der Eng, Pierre
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Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University
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Abstract
This paper discusses existing estimates of the number of deaths due to the 1918
Spanish influenza pandemic in Indonesia, particularly in the core island of Java.
Chandra (2013) estimated these deaths to be 4.26 to 4.37 million. The paper
substantiates that these estimates are the result of a methodology that relies on an
overestimated annual average population growth rate of 1.75% during 1880-1930.
Using a more realistic growth rate of 1.1% per year reduces the estimate to a still
considerable 1.47 million deaths in 1918. A rough estimate of excess mortality among
the non-Indonesian population in Java and the whole population in the outer islands
of Indonesia suggest a total of 2 million excess deaths related to the Spanish flu in
1918-19. The paper also briefly scrutinises the available vital statistics obtained from
the village registers in Java. Correcting these as much as possible for under-recording
confirms the impression that the estimates in Chandra (2013) are too high. The paper
identifies opportunities for further historical demography research related to the 1918
flu pandemic in Indonesia.
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Working papers in trade and development
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