Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Treasury: $ 8.7B set for lending to minorities

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WASHINGTON — The U. S. Treasury Department announced Tuesday the release of $ 8.7 billion to help increase lending to small and minority- owned businesses and people living in poorer communitie­s with limited access to banking.

The funds from the Emergency Capital Investment Program, which was created this year, will go to 186 community- based financial institutio­ns. Vice President Kamala Harris and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen discussed the investment­s in remarks at the Freedman’s Bank Forum, which was hosted by the Treasury Department.

“The wealth gap persists today, the homeowners­hip gap persists,” Harris said of the need for the investment­s. “Black entreprene­urs are three times more likely to report that a lack of access to capital negatively affects their profit margins.”

Yellen stressed that there would be a direct link between the money being provided and businesses in local communitie­s.

Black Americans represent 13.4% of the U. S. population, yet Federal Reserve figures show they control just 4.3% of household wealth. More than half of Black household wealth is in the form of pension entitlemen­ts, which cannot be passed along to future generation­s. This inequity makes it harder for people living in predominan­tly Black communitie­s to qualify for business loans and mortgages in ways that could help build their net worth.

The $ 8.7 billion will be going to institutio­ns headquarte­red in 36 states, as well as Guam and Washington, D. C. Roughly 54% of the funds is going to banks and 46% to credit unions.

The distributi­ons will range from more than $ 200 million for the largest institutio­ns to less than $ 100,000 for smaller ones.

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