Geoffrey H. Moore

American economist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican economist
PlacesUnited States of America
wasEconomist
Work fieldFinance
Gender
Male
Birth28 February 1914
Death9 March 2000 (aged 86 years)
Star signPisces
Awards
Distinguished Fellow of the American Economic Association 
Fellow of the American Statistical Association 
The details

Biography

Geoffrey Hoyt Moore (February 28, 1914 – March 9, 2000), whom The Wall Street Journal called “the father of leading indicators”, spent several decades working on business cycles at the National Bureau of Economic Research, where he helped build on the work of his mentors, Wesley Clair Mitchell and Arthur F. Burns. Moore also served as commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics from March 1969 to January 1973.

In 1946 Moore was teaching statistics at New York University and one of his students was Alan Greenspan, later chairman of the Federal Reserve, who would tell The New York Times that Moore was “a major force in economic statistics and business-cycle research for more than a half-century.” In 1956 he was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association. In 1996 Moore founded the Economic Cycle Research Institute in New York city.

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