Katie Fitzpatrick

Associate Professor at University of Delaware

Biography

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Dr. Fitzpatrick joined the faculty at the University of Delaware in 2018. Her primary field of interest is consumer finance, with a specific focus on financial services for low-income households and means-tested tax and transfer programs. Her research has been published in the National Tax Journal, the Southern Economic Journal, the Journal of Consumer Affairs, the Social Service Review, and the American Journal of Agricultural Economics. With her co-authors, she won the Musgrave Prize for the best paper published in the National Tax Journal in 2010 and was a Frank R. Breul Memorial Prize finalist in 2015 for the best paper published in the Social Service Review. She was also a finalist for the best paper published in the Journal of Consumer Affairs in 2016.

Her current work focuses on the use of mainstream and alternative financial institutions; the effectiveness of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), formerly the food stamp program; the effects of the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC); and, the causes and consequences of food insecurity. She is a Research Fellow with the University of Wisconsin's Center for Financial Security and a Visiting Scholar with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). Her work has been supported by the Russell Sage Foundation, the University of Wisconsin Institute for Research on Poverty, the University of Kentucky Center for Poverty Research, the Filene Research Institute, and the FDIC Center for Financial Research.

Prior to the University of Delaware, Dr. Fitzpatrick was an Associate Professor of Economics at Seattle University, an Economist at the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Economic Research Service (ERS) and served as an adjunct professor at the Georgetown Public Policy Institute. She has conducted research at the Health Policy Institute, the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, and the Brookings Institution.

Dr. Fitzpatrick holds a B.A. in Public Policy from Stanford University, a M.P.P. in Public Policy from Georgetown University, and a Ph.D. in Economics from Syracuse University. She frequently co-authors with her sister, Dr. Anne Fitzpatrick, an economist at the University of Massachusetts Boston.

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