Monday, June 8, 2015

Ages of Myanmar


When one hears the word “census”, there are so many census-related variables that come to his or her mind. It may be ethnicity, location, gender ratio, etc. For me, somehow it was “age”. I don’t know why age was the first that came to my mind. Maybe because my background was in biostatistics and I always used to see numbers in terms of birth and death rates. 

So basically my curiosity lies in knowing which age group is living where.

Before I moved onto digging through this question, there is a confession to make. I am horrible at looking at plain numbers. I am crazy, don’t you think? I am a statistician, I should be good with numbers. Truth is that I should have been an artist instead. I see patterns and understand things better when I draw pictures or color things. You can imagine that I used to be one of those students who color-coded all the notes and had an average of 30 color pens in her pencil case.

Back to my question: I decided to chart out a 100% column graph to find out more about this question. I LOVE 100% column graphs. It reminds me of being a geologist looking at the Earth’s layers and trying to find out which thick layer contains most amount of oil that I can dig up and sell off.
 
Age versus State Region

This graph wow-ed me. It shows not only the percentage of population living across each state region but also the change in the population across age group. I love this graph because it makes me understand the population structure without having to do any math. Here are a few of my observations.
  1. Even if you combine all the people in Kachin, Kayah, Kayin, Chin, Mon, Rakhine, Tanintharyi and Naypyitaw, it is still less than the people living in Yangon and Mandalay combined. The difference in population density is humongous.
  2. Something happened to Shan people every 10 years. There is a spike in Shan’s percentage of national population every 10 years. My bet is that some good amount of Shan people didn’t remember their age so they just rounded off their ages.
  3. Shan people again: Their percentage share of population is bigger when people are younger. Two possible explanations are that their birth rate is high or the older Shan folks don’t want to live in the Shan State.
  4. Yangon itself has an interesting pattern. Its share of population is very small for younger age groups, hinting at the family-size conscious life style of Yangon YUPPIES. But the share peaks at the age of 22, which can be suggesting that the rural migration to the former capital may happen around that age, whether for work or study.

 
Age vs Gender
Another interesting phenomena is that as women in Myanmar live longer than men. Well the trend is true everywhere on the world but almost 20% change from birth (50-50) to death (67-33) is quite huge. The difference seems to happen at the age of 15. My advice to guys: please try to be safe once you become of age. 


Saturday, June 6, 2015

What are the chances of finding a soulmate in Myanmar?

Myanmar census data is out. What that means for us - single people - is that now we are able to estimate our chances of finding a soul-mate in a very objective way.

But see, I am not that picky.
For me, as a single 27 year old girl, I am just hoping to find

Requirement 1) a single guy (...exemptions are for widows or divorcees with no kids)

Requirement 2) who is in the same age range as me (No offense to older folks. But it's just easier to talk to someone who is in the same generation as me. And I don't want to be a cougar either.)

Requirement 3) who lives in Yangon (I am a city girl, which is unfortunate for me. Except for Yangon, the rest of the country looks actually like a country-side.)

Requirement 4) who has at least a college degree (Education is important. Do you agree?)

Requirement 5) who is straight (But it's too bad that census data didn't ask people's sexual preferences. There is no way of knowing now.)

So do you agree that I am very reasonable with my requirements? I am sure you do.
Now let's look at my chances.
There are over 24 million guys in Myanmar. 24,228,714 guys to be exact.

Requirement 1) There are still 3.3 million single guys above the age of 20 left in Myanmar. Not even 14% chance. What a way to start looking at the chances.

Requirement 2) There are only 0.78 million single guys in the age range from 25-29 in Myanmar. Now my chance has gone down to 3%.

Requirement 3) There are 0.27 million single guys in the the age range from 25-29 in Yangon. If my prince charming will have to be from Yangon, my chance now has gone down even further to 1.1%.

Requirement 4) Census data doesn't have a tabulation with the age group, marital status and education status. So now I have to make some assumption. Among all the males in Yangon, 24% has at least a university degree. If that education status structure is similar across all marital status, now I am left only with 64,000 eligible guys. Probability wise, I am left with 0.26%.

Requirement 5) My chances are already slim as it is. I am not gonna go further down. Spare me a few mercy.

From the guy's side, I am sure he is looking for the same quality. There is still 0.15 million single women within my age group left in Yangon, a third of whom are assumed to have at least a university degree. (Hey...Myanmar women are smarter.) It means I may have a direct competition with about 50,000 women.

Overall, even though my chance is quite slim, the other 49,999 women are in the same boat as me. In fact, there are more gents than the ladies in this age group with comparable requirements, which is favorable to all of us. We ladies don't need to compete against each other that much. There is at least one guy for all of us. The gents are not as lucky as us though. Some 14,000 gents are definitely fated to be lu-pyo-gyis for life.

Myanmar Census 2014 Results

Myanmar census data 2014 was released recently. (You may download the publication from here.) This is an exciting time for us - data geeks, given how hard one can actually glimpse at a data set. We just don't have any. The last census was done in the 80's, before I was even born. A tale of having a reliable country-wide data in Myanmar used to be as old as time, but it is no longer.

In the light of this census, Phandeeyar - a local innovation hub - also organized a hackathon today to dig through the census data. This was also the first of many events lying ahead to restructure and to analyze the census data so that it will be accessible and easily understandable to everyone.

In short, I am excited. Everyone is excited. So stay tuned for a series of my interpretations of the census data.

Friday, May 8, 2015

Watch out

A good friend of mine from work always joked me how statisticians are crazy. Here is the story.  
 
 A statistician once wanted to know the time. So he took out his two pocket watches. One watch was broken and hence, stopped at noon. Another watch was found to be 5 minutes early. He decided to use the broken watch to look up the time.

Here is the reasoning behind his thoughts: 
Watch 1: Although it is broken, there will be 2 moments in a day when he has the chance to get the time right.
Watch 2: Since the watch is always 5 minutes early, he will never get the time right.

Sounds crazy, right? How did that happen? The logic is exactly right.

This just points out how important it is for statisticians to know not only the numbers but also the context.

In this case, the poor guy just got the model wrong. He could have plotted the correct time (Y) versus the times that the two watches are showing (X1 and X2). (Y~X1) and (Y~X2). He would have found out that the second watch was a much better fit. 

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အလုပ္က ခင္မင္ရတဲ့ အန္ကယ္ၾကီးတစ္ေယာက္က ကၽြန္မကို စာရင္းပညာရွင္ေတြ ေဂါက္ေၾကာင္ျဖစ္တတ္ပံုအေၾကာင္းကို ဒီလိုအျမဲေနာက္ေလ့ရွိပါတယ္။

 တစ္ခါက စာရင္းပညာရွင္တစ္ေယာက္က အခ်ိန္သိခ်င္တဲ့အတြက္ သူ႕ရဲ႕ အိတ္ေဆာင္နာရီ ၂ လံုးကို ထုတ္ၾကည့္လိုက္ပါတယ္။ ပထမနာရီက ကြဲျပီး ရပ္ေနပါတယ္။ ေနာက္နာရီကေတာ့ ၅ မိနစ္ျမန္ေနပါတယ္။ အဲဒါနဲ႕ပဲ ပညာရွင္ၾကီးက ပထမနာရီကို သံုးဖို႕ ဆံုးျဖတ္လိုက္ပါတယ္။

သူစဥ္းစားတာက ဒီလိုေလ။ ပထမနာရီက ရပ္ေနေပမယ့္ တစ္ေန႕ကို ၂ ခါေတာ့ မွန္ႏိုင္ေသးတယ္။ ဒုတိယနာရီက အျမဲတမ္း ၅ မိနစ္စာ လြဲေနဦးမယ္။

ဘာေတြလဲ။ ဘယ္လိုျဖစ္သြားတာလဲ။ သူေျပာေတာ့လည္း ဟုတ္ေနတာပဲမလား။

ဒီပံုျပင္ေလးက စာရင္းပညာရွင္ေတြအဖို႕ နံပါတ္ေတြပဲ ၾကည့္မယ့္အစား အေျခအေနကိုလည္း နားလည္ဖို႕လိုေၾကာင္း မီးေမာင္းထိုးျပေနပါတယ္။ 

တကယ္လို႕ ပညာရွင္ၾကီးက အခ်ိန္အမွန္နဲ႕ နာရီ ၂ ခုက ျပေနတဲ့ အခ်ိန္ေတြကိုသာ ဂရပ္ဆြဲၾကည့္လိုက္ရင္ ဒုတိယနာရီက ပိုမွန္ေၾကာင္း သိႏိုင္ပါတယ္။