
B.Sc. - Applied Mathematics and B.Sc. - Economics - North Carolina A&T State University
Biography
Monique E. Davis (she/her) is an applied micro and labor economist specializing in using empirical methods to study the economics of racism, racial equity, and intergroup inequality. She is a Ph.D. Candidate in the Applied Economics Graduate Program at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN.
Monique was born in Chicago, IL and raised in the Chicagoland area. In 2013, she earned Bachelor of Science degrees in Applied Mathematics and Economics from North Carolina A&T State University, an HBCU in Greensboro, NC. Before returning to school in 2019, she worked for six years at JPMorgan Chase & Co. where she spent the first two years in Columbus, OH in a rotational development program supporting various roles, and the last four years she worked as a big data analyst/data scientist in New York, NY.
Monique's career and research interests as an economist are largely motivated by her experiences, both lived and observed, within her family and broader African-American communities in the southside of Chicago and surrounding areas. Monique seeks to identify root causes that explain the differences in inequitable outcomes between privileged and marginalized communities, particularly regarding the Black community, and leverage the resulting knowledge to inform policy changes, structural and otherwise, which bring us closer to social equity and justice.
Areas of Interest
Research Fields: Labor Economics (JEL J), Applied Microeconomics (JEL D), and Health, Education, and Welfare (JEL I)
Teaching Fields: Microeconomics (JEL D), Econometrics (JEL C), and Labor Economics (JEL J)
Areas of Interest: Economics of Minorities/Gender (JEL J15/J16), Equity, Justice, and Inequality (JEL D63), Education and Inequality (JEL I24), and Stratification Economics (JEL Z13)