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Featured researches published by Leigh Gardner.


The Economic History Review | 2014

The rise and fall of sterling in Liberia, 1847–1943†

Leigh Gardner

Recent research on exchange rate regime choice in developing countries has revealed that a range of factors, from weak fiscal institutions to high costs of borrowing in their own currencies, limits the range of options available to these countries. This article uses the case of Liberia to illustrate that new states in Africa during the gold standard era faced similar limitations, even in the absence of formal colonial rule. The rapid depreciation of the Liberian dollar in the nineteenth century led to the adoption of sterling as a medium of exchange and store of value. This initially made it easier for Liberia to service its sterling‐denominated debt and for Liberians to purchase imports from Britain. However, as economic relations with the US deepened during the twentieth century, instability in the pound–dollar exchange rate created serious dislocations in the Liberian economy, ultimately leading to the official adoption of the US dollar in 1943. The story of Liberia illustrates the long‐standing challenges of globalization for peripheral economies and suggests the need for a reassessment of the origins and impact of colonial monetary regimes.


Revista De Historia Economica | 2016

Economic Development In Africa And Europe: Reciprocal Comparisons

Stephen Broadberry; Leigh Gardner

Recent advances in historical national accounting have allowed for global comparisons of GDP per capita across space and time. Critics have argued that GDP per capita fails to capture adequately the effects of new technology on living standards, and have developed alternative measures such as the human development index (HDI). Whilst recognising that this provides an appropriate measure for assessing levels of welfare, we argue that GDP per capita remains a more appropriate measure for assessing development potential, encompassing production as well as consumption. Twentieth-century Africa and pre-industrial Europe are used to show how such data can guide reciprocal comparisons to provide insights into the process of development on both continents.


Archive | 2013

Africa's growth prospects in a European mirror : a historical perspective

Stephen Broadberry; Leigh Gardner


European Review of Economic History | 2017

Colonialism or supersanctions: sovereignty and debt in West Africa, 1871-1914

Leigh Gardner


Archive | 2014

African economic growth in a European mirror: a historical perspective

Stephen Broadberry; Leigh Gardner


LSE Research Online Documents on Economics | 2016

Economic development in Africa and Europe: reciprocal comparisons

Stephen Broadberry; Leigh Gardner


LSE Research Online Documents on Economics | 2015

The curious incident of the franc in the Gambia: exchange rate instability and imperial monetary systems in the 1920s

Leigh Gardner


The Economic History Review | 2014

William G. Martin, South Africa and the world economy: remaking race, state and region (Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 2013. Pp. x + 271. 10 figs. 1 tabs. ISBN 9781580464314 Hbk. £50)

Leigh Gardner


Archive | 2014

Africa’s recent economic success in a European mirror: a historical perspective on avoiding ‘growth reversals’ and achieving sustained growth

Leigh Gardner; Stephen Broadberry


Archive | 2014

From boom to bust: avoiding economic ‘growth reversals’ in Africa

Leigh Gardner; Stephen Broadberry

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Stephen Broadberry

London School of Economics and Political Science

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