Scandinavian Working Papers in Economics

African Economic History Working Paper,
African Economic History Network

No 58/2020: On the Freetown Waterfront: Household Income and Informal Wage Labour in a Nineteenth Century Port City

Laura Channing () and Bronwen Everill ()
Additional contact information
Laura Channing: African Economic History Network
Bronwen Everill: African Economic History Network

Abstract: In this article, we use the 1831 Freetown Census alongside a variety of business and colonial papers to argue for the importance of informal, seasonal, flexible labor conducted at the household level – rather than individual breadwinner –in understanding how the economy in urban port cities in Africa and elsewhere in the Atlantic World operated in the nineteenth century. We construct a welfare ratio of different wage categories over the nineteenth century, as well as presenting sample household welfare ratios using real households from the Census. We argue that the flexibility, ‘entrepreneurship’, and precarity of the informal port city economy of the nineteenth century is relevant for understanding the nature of the modern gig economy and the predominance of ‘underemployment’ and informal employment in African urban areas. An archivally-based long view of how households strategized about their welfare can help to undo some of the ‘compression of history’ prevalent in the literature, and can offer contextualization to recent comparative real wage.

Keywords: Standard of living; port city; household economy; Africa; informal economy

JEL-codes: N17; N37

36 pages, November 10, 2020

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