Areas of expertise
Stratification economics • Political economy of health • Labor economics
Biography
Kyle K. Moore (he/him) is an economist with the Economic Policy Institute’s Program on Race, Ethnicity, and the Economy. He studies economic inequality in the frameworks of stratification economics, political economy, and public health. Prior to joining EPI, Moore was a senior policy analyst with the Joint Economic Committee’s Democratic Staff, where he authored reports on economic policy issues centered on race, class, age, and gender disparities for use by Members of Congress and the public.
Moore’s research focuses on the intersection between racial economic disparities and health inequity across the life course, with particular focus on “upstream” structural causes of morbidity and mortality differences across race. In 2019 Moore was a Dissertation Scholar at the Washington Center for Equitable Growth. Prior to this he worked as a doctoral fellow and research associate with the Retirement Equity Lab at the Schwartz Center for Economic Policy Analysis.
Education
Ph.D., Economics, The New School for Social Research
M.A., Economics, The New School for Social Research
B.A, Economics, Morehouse College
Latest
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We’ve been here before, and we know what comes next: White supremacy has always been used to usher in massive economic inequality
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Failing to extend the enhanced ACA premium tax credits is an attack on working-class Black families and major metro areas
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Ending ACA tax credits would impose high costs on Black Americans in 10 major metro areas: Over 170,000 losing health insurance, $740 million more in annual premiums, and more than 200 preventable deaths each year
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New measure of poverty shows that undoing ACA subsidies will push millions into economic insecurity: Communities of color would be hit hardest by Trump’s health care affordability crisis
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Workplace nondiscrimination protections: State solutions to the U.S. worker rights crisis
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Next week’s 2024 Census data will give us the final snapshot of the economy’s health before Trump
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Trump’s crusade against health and safety regulations endangers workers, hobbles the environmental justice movement, and sets the stage for our next public health crisis
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Trump-led attacks on equity are setting the stage for our next public health crisis
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Trump’s gutting of public health institutions is setting the stage for our next crisis
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Cuts to Medicaid will disproportionately hurt people of color and children
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Why we have to keep talking about reparations in 2025
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New data explore U.S. economic conditions by race and ethnicity—including for American Indian and Alaska Native communities
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The free market won’t solve our nationwide housing affordability problem: Equity-focused policy is the solution
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The economy isn’t sick right now—but it has chronic conditions that demand attention
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Student debt and homeownership barriers in D.C.
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Despite a strong labor market, the choice to allow pandemic-era public assistance programs to expire increased poverty across all racial groups in 2022
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Unions promote racial equity
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Five principles for making state and local reparations plans reparative
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Domestic Workers Chartbook 2022: A comprehensive look at the demographics, wages, benefits, and poverty rates of the professionals who care for our family members and clean our homes
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Census data show health insurance coverage gains for Black workers and children in 2021, but we can go further with better policy
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The growing housing supply shortage has created a housing affordability crisis
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Stratification economics: A moral policy approach for addressing persistent group-based disparities
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Advancing anti-racist economic research and policy: Perspectives and resources on race, ethnicity, and the economy
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Pandemic-related economic insecurity among Black and Hispanic households would have been worse without a swift policy response
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Black and brown workers saw the weakest wage gains over a 40-year period in which employers failed to increase wages with productivity
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EPI comments on OMB’s methods and leading practices for advancing equity and support for underserved communities
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Labor rights and civil rights: One intertwined struggle for all workers
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We need a vaccine for false narratives about racial disparities: Taking statistics with a dose of history and context will bolster economic and racial justice for Black workers