Biography
Zane Mokhiber (he/him) joined EPI in 2016. As director of data management and analysis, he is responsible for developing, deploying and training users of EPI’s myriad public use data products. Mokhiber manages research support staff to deliver the analytical needs of EPI’s economists and policy researchers on topics such as wages, labor markets, race and gender inequality, trade, manufacturing, and economic growth. Prior to joining EPI, Mokhiber worked for the Worker Institute at Cornell University as an undergraduate research fellow.
Education
B.S., Industrial and Labor Relations, Cornell University ILR School
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What constitutes a living wage?: A guide to using EPI’s Family Budget Calculator
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The Economic Policy Institute’s Family Budget Calculator: Technical Documentation
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EPI comment regarding DOL’s proposed information collection to update the National Database of Childcare Prices
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Stagnant top-code thresholds threaten data reliability for the highest earners and make inequality difficult to accurately measure
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Raising the federal minimum wage to $15 by 2025 would lift the pay of 32 million workers: A demographic breakdown of affected workers and the impact on poverty, wages, and inequality
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Rebuilding American manufacturing—potential job gains by state and industry: Analysis of trade, infrastructure, and clean energy/energy efficiency proposals
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Household income gains welcome in 2019 Census data, but may not be as strong as they first appear
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By the Numbers: Income and Poverty, 2019
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Growing China trade deficit cost 3.7 million American jobs between 2001 and 2018: Jobs lost in every U.S. state and congressional district
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Early child care and education in the states
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By the Numbers: Income and Poverty, 2018
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Breaking the silence on early child care and education costs: A values-based budget for children, parents, and teachers in California
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Class of 2019: High school edition
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Class of 2019: College edition
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Minimum Wage Simulation Model technical methodology
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The China toll deepens: Growth in the bilateral trade deficit between 2001 and 2017 cost 3.4 million U.S. jobs, with losses in every state and congressional district
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Black workers have made no progress in closing earnings gaps with white men since 2000
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By the Numbers: Income and Poverty, 2017
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Class of 2018: High school edition
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Class of 2018: College edition
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Janus and fair share fees: The organizations financing the attack on unions’ ability to represent workers
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Two billion dollars in stolen wages were recovered for workers in 2015 and 2016—and that’s just a drop in the bucket
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2016 ACS shows stubbornly high Native American poverty and different degrees of economic well-being for Asian ethnic groups
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Most families are nearly back to 2007 income levels, but inequality continues to grow in 2016
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How today’s unions help working people: Giving workers the power to improve their jobs and unrig the economy
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Under new bill’s election standard, unions would never win an election—and neither would the bill’s cosponsors