The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

African-American hurt by ownership

Owning homes worse than renting in many areas.

- By Tim Henderson

Politician­s and advocates have long touted homeowners­hip as the best way to build wealth, saying that over the long term, home values go in only one direction: up.

But since the dawn of the 21st century, that promise has been an empty one for many African-Americans.

In nearly a fifth of the ZIP codes where most home- owners are black, home values have decreased since 2000, compared with only 2 percent of ZIP codes where black homeowners are not the majority, according to a Stateline analysis of federal data on home prices, race and income.

Among the largest losers: some Detroit neighborho­ods along Eight Mile Road and parts of Trotwood, Ohio, near Dayton, where home prices have dropped by a third or more since 2000. Home prices in majority-black parts of Clayton and DeKalb counties outside Atlanta also have declined since 2000, as have the values in some majority-black suburbs south of Chicago, such as Riverdale and Olym- pia Fields. All were hit hard when the Great Recession arrived in 2007.

Falling home prices affect both poor and affluent black neighborho­ods, but it’s par- ticularly vexing for policy- makers who have long recommende­d homeowners­hip as a method of building wealth for low-income black families, said Sandra New- man, a professor of public policy at Johns Hopkins University and author of a 2015 study of race and changes in net worth before and after the Great Recession.

“There really is a caution- ary note here,” she said.

“Becoming a homeowner, or at least a first-time home- buyer, may not be the right approach for all households,” Newman said. “On black first-time buyers vs. renting: we’re pretty decisive, they would have done better had they stayed rent- ers.”

At the same time, however, gentrifica­tion in some cities led to huge gains for some black homeowners when upper-income buyers became interested in their neighborho­ods. Home prices have more than doubled in some well-known black neighborho­ods in coastal cities, including every majority-black ZIP code in the Los Angeles area, from tony Bald- win Hills to gritty Compton, and, on the East Coast, in Brooklyn’s Crown Heights and parts of Miami’s Liberty City.

Mike Buttler, a real estate investor who grew up in Inglewood near Los Angeles in a majority-black ZIP code where prices have more than doubled since 2000, said his grandparen­ts’ house was worth $800,000 at the peak of the housing bubble just before the recession. It is worth about $400,000 now, but that is still twice what it was worth in 2000.

The neighborho­od is more desirable than it was in the 1990s, he said, because black investors brought jobs and entertainm­ent options.

“When I was growing up, even though it was a mid- dle-class area, there was only one movie theater and it was showing movies that were 15 years old. We had to get on a bus and go to another town to see anything else,” Buttler said. “Now people are looking at these communitie­s and saying, ‘OK, they have the amenities. The drugs and the gangs are gone. I could live here.’”

In Brooklyn, there are four majority-black ZIP codes where home values have more than tripled since 2000.

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