Dr. Lakeysha Hallmon

The Architect of the Modern Economic Village

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In the traditional world of philanthropy, the narrative is often one of “top-down” charity—where the elite distribute resources to the underserved. Dr. Lakeysha Hallmon, the founder and CEO of The Village Market, has spent her career dismantling this model. She has replaced the concept of the “donor” with the concept of the “villager,” proving that the most sustainable form of wealth creation is not a grant from a foundation, but the deliberate, rhythmic circulation of currency within one’s own community.

Born and raised in the South, Hallmon began her professional journey as an educator. Her “turning point” occurred as she navigated the contrast between the brilliance she saw in Black creators and the lack of structural support available to them. She realized that Black entrepreneurs were not suffering from a lack of talent, but from a lack of “ecosystem.” In traditional retail and tech spaces, the barriers to entry were often insurmountable for “non-elite” founders. Hallmon decided to move from the classroom to the economic front lines, carrying with her a singular, radical philosophy: “Everything we need is already in the room.”

In 2016, she launched The Village Market in Atlanta. What began as a seasonal marketplace quickly evolved into a massive economic engine. Hallmon’s brilliance lay in her ability to engineer a space that was part-incubator, part-retail powerhouse, and part-mutual aid society. By providing Black-owned businesses with high-traffic visibility—most notably through The Village at Ponce City Market—she bypassed the traditional gatekeepers of venture capital and commercial real estate. To date, her initiative has funneled over $8 million directly into the pockets of Black entrepreneurs. This isn’t just “business”; it is the modern evolution of the “We over Me” math established by the Free African Society in 1787.

Hallmon’s work proves that economics is the ultimate safety net. She teaches that when a community circulates its dollar, it is participating in a form of non-elite philanthropy that requires no outside permission. By shifting the focus from “spending” to “investing in the village,” she has created a blueprint for communal resilience. Her “Our Money Matters” movement is the 21st-century answer to Oseola McCarty’s sacrificial saving; it is the realization that our collective buying power, when organized, is the most potent revolutionary tool we possess.

Dr. Lakeysha Hallmon is the “Future” of April’s relay because she has scaled the ancient practice of mutual aid into a global standard for Black business. She reminds us that the “rescue” isn’t coming from the one percent—it is coming from the person standing next to us. In the economy of the Village, no one is left behind, and every purchase is a brick in the foundation of a sovereign future.

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Dr. Lakeysha Hallmon proves that economics is the modern mutual aid. Just as the Free African Society pooled pennies to protect their families in 1787, Hallmon is pooling community capital to ensure Black families own their future. She is the voice reminding us that the most sustainable form of philanthropy is the one where we invest in our own brilliance.

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