Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Racial gap persists as home sales boom, possibly leaving some behind

- By Michaelle Bond and Dominique DeMoe

The housing market has stayed strong throughout the pandemic, thanks in large part to historical­ly low mortgage rates. But not everyone has an equal opportunit­y to take advantage, as the National Associatio­n of Realtors laid out in a report on race and home buying last month.

The second annual report examined racial gaps in home ownership nationwide and by state.

Home ownership helps families build wealth. In 2019, the net worth of a homeowner was $255,000 — 40 times the net worth of a renter, according to the Federal Reserve. In the past decade, Black Americans have seen the largest drop in homeowners­hip rates.

Financial institutio­ns reject the mortgage applicatio­ns of Black prospectiv­e homebuyers at rates 2½ times that of white buyers, according to the National Associatio­n of Realtors report. Black homebuyers also are more likely to have student loan debt, which can be a hurdle to purchasing a home. Rising home prices threaten to knock more potential buyers — including those who are Black — out of the housing market.

“We need to find solutions for everyone to have the same opportunit­ies for homeowners­hip,” said Nadia Evangelou, senior economist and director of forecastin­g at the National Associatio­n of Realtors and one of the report’s authors.

The associatio­n published the report to urge policymake­rs to find those solutions, she said. It supports the Biden administra­tion’s proposal for a tax credit of up to $15,000 for first-time homebuyers and wants to increase incentives for builders to create more housing that people in their markets can afford.

Here are some highlights from the associatio­n’s report:

Nationwide, the white homeowners­hip rate was almost 70% in 2019. It was 78% in Delaware, which is tied with South Carolina and Mississipp­i as the states with the highest rate. In states with the lowest rates, roughly half of the white population were homeowners.

In contrast, the Black homeowners­hip rate was 42% nationally in 2019. In Puerto Rico, 70% of Black people were

homeowners, the highest U.S. rate. South Carolina and Maryland were the states with the highest rate, at 52%. The states with the lowest rates — North Dakota, Wyoming and Montana — also have Black population­s of less than 3%. Their Black homeowners­hip rates range from 5% in North Dakota to 20% in Montana.

Home prices have climbed as demand stays high, prices of building materials such as lumber continue to rise, and the supply of homes for sale stays low. Builders have produced fewer housing units than needed for the past decade, according to the Realtors group.

In December, the national median price of existing homes hit roughly $309,800, up 40% from five years prior, according to the Realtors group.

The affordabil­ity of homes varies by region and race. Nationally, 43% of Black Americans can afford to buy a home and 63% of white Americans can.

In the nation’s capital, 14% of Black residents can buy compared with 56% of white residents. Decades of systemic housing discrimina­tion and policies limiting Black wealth underlie the disparitie­s.

In Pennsylvan­ia, 70% or more of white and Asian residents can afford to buy a home, but less than half of Black residents can afford one.

Nationwide, white people bought 81% of the homes purchased in 2019. Black people bought 7% of the homes. Maryland; Washington, D.C.; and Delaware had the highest share of homes bought by Black residents — about 23%.

Pennsylvan­ia’s sales breakdown of white and Black homebuyers mirrored that of the nation.

The National Associatio­n of Realtors compared buyers before and after the start of the pandemic and found that slightly more Hispanic and Latino buyers and Asian and Pacific Islander buyers purchased homes after the pandemic started, as mortgage rates continued to fall.

The share of Black homebuyers before and after the pandemic stayed the same. From July 2019 to July 2020, more than 80% of homebuyers were white.

Homebuyers who can use the equity in their homes to buy a new one have an advantage over first- time homebuyers. Between June 2019 and June 2020, 72% of white homebuyers were repeat buyers, compared with 52% of Black home buyers.

The National Associatio­n of Realtors used data from the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey to study homeowners­hip and affordabil­ity by race. It also surveyed more than 8,200 people who purchased homes between July 2019 and June 2020.

 ?? Ty Wright/Bloomberg ?? A National Associatio­n of Realtors report laid out the racial gaps in homeowners­hip during the pandemic. For instance, financial institutio­ns rejected mortgage applicatio­ns from Black homebuyers at a rate 2.5 times higher than white homebuyers.
Ty Wright/Bloomberg A National Associatio­n of Realtors report laid out the racial gaps in homeowners­hip during the pandemic. For instance, financial institutio­ns rejected mortgage applicatio­ns from Black homebuyers at a rate 2.5 times higher than white homebuyers.

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