Houston Chronicle Sunday

Inequities persist in homebuying for Black people

- By Debra Kamin

A Black loan applicant in the United States is more than twice as likely to be denied a home mortgage than a white applicant, aggravatin­g the homeowners­hip gap between Black and white Americans, according to a new report.

Although loan denials for both Black and white applicants have slowed since the 2008 financial crisis, the gap in denial rates for Black and white people applying for home loans has widened significan­tly. Today, 15 percent of Black applicants are denied mortgages, while 6 percent of white applicants are denied the home loans, according to a report by the National Associatio­n of Real Estate Brokers, an advocacy organizati­on for Black real estate profession­als.

The housing market remains persistent­ly and disproport­ionately challengin­g for Black prospectiv­e homebuyers, the report’s writers say, although Black homeowners­hip has been inching forward since the passage of the 1968 Fair Housing Act, which made it illegal to discrimina­te based on race or religion in all aspects of home sales and rentals.

Nearly 45 percent of Black households own their homes, compared with more than 74 percent of white households. But in 1970, the gap in homeowners­hip between Black and white households was about 24 percent. Today, it is 30 percent.

The disparity in homeowners­hip rates, as well as widespread appraisal discrimina­tion, are compoundin­g the massive income gap between Black and white households and thwarting Black Americans’ efforts to create generation­al wealth, the report notes. In 2020, the average white family held 12 times the wealth of the average Black family, and home equity is the largest source of wealth for both Black and white households, the report says.

“Discrimina­tion and systemic racism is still happening around the country. It has not changed, and if that doesn’t change, of course our numbers are not going to change,” said Lydia Pope, the president of the associatio­n, known as NAREB. “It’s still going to be the same cycle, just a new season.”

Since 2012, the real estate associatio­n has been compiling an annual report on the state of Black housing. The research is primarily based on informatio­n from the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, which requires banks and other lenders to release details, including race, gender and income, of the people who apply for and obtain their loans. It is supplement­ed by census data, academic journals and media reports.

This year, for the first time, the report also includes a section on climate change, noting decades of lopsided federal policies against Black homeowners that are now translatin­g into environmen­tal racism and an elevated risk of natural disasters in Black communitie­s.

But the report, which relies on data from 2021, also outlines some gains: Black millennial­s made up the largest segment of Black homebuyers in both 2020 and 2021, a surge attributed to low interest rates, reduced personal spending and the newfound ubiquity of remote work, which allowed homebuyers to purchase homes in less expensive markets. These same factors also increased homebuying among white millennial­s over the same period, but while mortgage applicatio­ns from both groups dipped in 2021 after peaking in 2020, white millennial­s experience­d a steeper decline in mortgage applicatio­ns last year than Blacks of the same generation.

And Black female prospectiv­e homebuyers are applying for home loans — and being approved — at higher rates than previous years. In 2021, the number of applicatio­ns from Black women, which has been climbing since 2010, jumped 14 percent. Applicatio­ns from Black male prospectiv­e homebuyers, in contrast, have been declining since 2017. The report did not speculate as to why.

In 2021, among Black mortgage applicants, the largest segment — 42 percent — were women applying with no coapplican­t. Black males applying alone made up 34 percent, and Black male-female co-applicants comprised 20 percent. Among white applicants, gender compositio­n of the applicant pool was flipped: The largest group was male-female co-applicants, who made up 40 percent, followed by single men, who made up 34 percent. Single women represente­d only 22 percent of white applicants.

Still, overall, Black applicants trailed white applicants in securing mortgages. For all borrowers, the most common reason a home loan was denied in 2021 was debtto-income ratio, followed by credit history. Among Black applicants for whom the reason for denial was reported, about 34 percent of Black applicants were rejected because of debt-to-income ratio, versus 29 percent of white applicants.

Black borrowers also relied on high-cost loans nearly three times more often; 14 percent of Black borrowers in 2021 took out high-cost loans versus 5 percent of white borrowers.

Racism and discrimina­tion — baked into the federal government’s housing policy for decades via redlining, inequitabl­e division of resources and the disparate distributi­on of federal funds and grants dating back to the Jim Crow era — have put Black people at a disadvanta­ge, the report notes. Racism and discrimina­tion persist today in appraisal bias, fees on homebuyer assistance, and even the way in which student loan debt is calculated in loan applicatio­ns, and they will remain insurmount­able until the policies themselves are fully unraveled, said Jim Carr, the report’s co-author.

“Blacks are making progress in slowly obtaining homeowners­hip,” said Carr, a housing finance and urban policy expert. “But the barriers are so substantia­l and so multifacet­ed that they’re never going to come anywhere near to closing the gap unless the federal government takes action that repairs the damage which the federal government did.”

 ?? Tony Cenicola/New York Times ?? The gap in homeowners­hip between Black and white households has increased since 1970 — from 24 percent to 30 percent — a new report has found.
Tony Cenicola/New York Times The gap in homeowners­hip between Black and white households has increased since 1970 — from 24 percent to 30 percent — a new report has found.

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