To estimate the exit rate from the United States, the following approach is used. First, the American community survey is used to determine an initial cohort (immigrants) that entered the United States in year t. Then, the number of immigrants remaining after five years is determined (remainingst,t+5) using the same survey. Third, age‑ and sex-specific mortality rate data is extracted from the Human Mortality Database to estimate the number of deaths in the cohort during the period of interest (deathst,t+5). Finally, the number of exits (exitst,t+5) is derived as follows:
Equation11
=
The 5‑year exit rate (exit_ratet, t+5) is obtained by dividing the number of exits by the initial cohort:
Equation 2
The entry periods considered are 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014. It should be noted, however, that the number of cohorts in a given year t is determined using the t+1 survey data. This avoids the problem of partial coverage. The main limitation of this approach is that immigrants who returned before one year are not captured in the initial cohort. In addition, for the periods considered, there are no observations with missing information on the year of entry. Therefore, the treatment of missing values is not applicable.