Generated by GPT-5-mini| David Henderson | |
|---|---|
| Name | David Henderson |
| Birth date | 1944 |
| Birth place | Glasgow |
| Occupation | Economist, Author, Academic |
| Alma mater | University of Oxford, University of Warwick |
| Known for | Work on macroeconomics, monetary policy, policy analysis |
David Henderson is a Scottish-born economist, academic, and policy analyst noted for his contributions to macroeconomics, monetary policy, and the public understanding of economic ideas. He served in academic posts and policy roles in the United Kingdom and Canada and authored books and articles aimed at both specialist and general audiences. His work spans comparative analysis of inflation, unemployment, and the role of central banks in market economies.
Henderson was born in Glasgow and educated in Scotland before attending the University of Warwick for undergraduate studies and the University of Oxford for graduate work. During his formative years he engaged with debates around Keynesian economics, Milton Friedman, and the resurgence of classical liberalism that influenced his approach to monetary theory and public policy. His postgraduate training placed emphasis on quantitative methods used across macroconomics, time series analysis, and comparative institutional studies of central banking.
Henderson held academic appointments at institutions including the University of Warwick, the London School of Economics, and later Canadian universities where he combined teaching with research on inflation, wage dynamics, and the implications of exchange rate regimes. He advised research programs linked to think tanks such as the Adam Smith Institute and contributed to policy units associated with the British Treasury and Canadian provincial ministries. Henderson also served as a visiting scholar at Princeton University and engaged with research networks tied to the International Monetary Fund and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
Henderson authored books and numerous articles addressing monetary policy, the causes of stagflation, and proposals for market-friendly reforms. His works critiqued prevailing policy frameworks influenced by Keynesianism and drew on comparative studies involving the United Kingdom, United States, and Canada. Topics included analysis of interest rates, price stability, and the institutional role of central banks such as the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve System. He engaged in public debates through essays in outlets connected to the Times and journals associated with the Institute of Economic Affairs.
Henderson participated in advisory roles for governments and contributed to policy discussions during periods of high inflation and structural reform in the late 20th century. He provided testimony and consultations for parliamentary committees linked to fiscal and monetary oversight and worked with policy-oriented organizations including the Fraser Institute and the Heritage Foundation on comparative policy studies. His public interventions addressed debates over tax reform, deregulation, and the design of monetary institutions to promote price stability and sustainable employment outcomes.
Henderson married and raised a family while continuing to write for academic and popular audiences; he maintained residences in the United Kingdom and Canada. His legacy includes contributions to the dissemination of market-oriented analyses of policy choices and mentorship of students who entered public service, academia, and think tanks. His influence is evident in subsequent discussions on the independence of central banks and the interplay between macroeconomic policy and institutional design. Category:British economists