Dr. Kristen Broady is a Fellow at the Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program. She is Professor of Financial Economics on leave at Dillard University in New Orleans. She previously served on the faculties of Howard University, Alabama A&M University, Dominican University, Fort Valley State University, and Kentucky State University and as a visiting faculty member at Jiangsu Normal University in Xuzhou, China during the summer of 2019. Dr. Broady served as a consultant for the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies in Washington, D.C.; a senior research fellow for the Center for Global Policy Solutions in Washington, D.C.; a consultant for the City of East Point, Georgia and as an HBCU consultant for season two of The Quad on Black Entertainment Television (BET) in Atlanta. Her areas of research include mortgage foreclosure risk, labor and automation, and racial health disparities. She earned a B.A. in criminal justice at Alcorn State University and an MBA and Ph.D. in business administration with a major in economics at Jackson State University.
Author
Kristen E. Broady
Fellow, Metropolitan Policy Program, The Brookings Institution

Related
Papers
March 4, 2021
Race and Jobs at Risk of Being Automated in the Age of COVID-19
Webinar
February 16, 2021
Rethinking Workforce Development: Policies to Protect Workers and Families
Posts
January 11, 2021
Higher Education’s Reopening Decisions Affected the Most Vulnerable Students
Papers
December 8, 2020
The Black-White Wealth Gap Left Black Households More Vulnerable
Posts
October 8, 2020
Major Decisions: What Graduates Earn Over Their Lifetimes
Posts
September 21, 2020
An Eviction Moratorium without Rental Assistance Hurts Smaller Landlords, Too
Economic Facts
September 17, 2020
Ten Facts about COVID-19 and the U.S. Economy
Posts
September 9, 2020