Black Americans are paying more to own a home and falling further behind

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Black Americans are paying more to own a home and falling further behind - CNN


Black Americans are paying more to own a home and falling further behind
https://www.cnn.com/profiles/anna-bahney
By Anna Bahney, CNN Business

Updated 9:00 AM ET, Sat October 10, 2020

(CNN)Black Americans pay more than any other group to own a home, a disparity that contributes to roughly half of the $130,000 retirement savings gap between Blacks and Whites, according to new study from MIT.

Black homeowners pay more in mortgage interest, mortgage insurance and property taxes than other homeowners, according to the paper by Edward Golding, executive director of the MIT Golub Center for Finance and Policy and co-authors, Michelle Aronowitz and Jung Hyun Choi.

Overall, the differences in mortgage interest payments amount to $743 a year, mortgage insurance premiums come to $550 a year and property taxes are about $390 per year. Together, this results in $67,320 in lost retirement savings for Black homeowners when invested over 30 years, according to the paper.
These inequities make it impossible for Black homeowners to build wealth through home ownership at the same rate as White households, said Golding, who was head of the Federal Housing Administration from 2015 to 2017.

"The small differences compounding over the life of the mortgage and during home ownership can add up," Golding said. "Even if it is a few hundred dollars a year here and there, it can amount to another year's salary families would otherwise have."

The burden of risk
Mortgage lenders use a system of risk-based lending, which charges borrowers who have less money for a down payment or a lower credit score more for their loan. This has disproportionately hurt Black homeowners, the researchers found.

Due to past discriminatory policies and practices, Black homeowners on average have lower credit scores and less savings available for down payments, the research shows.
Mortgage rates are now at historic lows, but many Black families are missing out on those super low rates because they are reserved for those with the highest credit scores and who can provide 20% down payments.

"While mortgage costs are determined by markets to some extent," said Golding, "there is a great deal of public policy that influences these rates, especially as it impacts people of color. We can and should address these issues at a policy level and start now to eliminate the large wealth gap between Black and White homeowners that we created in part through our current mortgage system."
In addition to risk-based pricing for mortgages, the researchers found that limited availability for family assistance with down payments and the way property taxes are assessed are "significant, calculable factors driving the higher cost of homeownership for African Americans."

The researchers suggest that there are ways to change some disparities.
For example, risk could be pooled and priced uniformly into all mortgages. Separately, tax credits for first-time homeowners could be used as a down payment to reduce the effect of risk-based pricing. Another option is a government-supported insurance program that would cover an individual's mortgage payments in the event of unemployment or disability.

Refinancing opportunities missed
Black households are also missing out on opportunities to refinance their mortgages to lower rates, the report found.

The paper estimates that the lack of refinancing opportunities results in Black homeowners paying another $475 per year more than White homeowners, resulting in a loss of cumulative retirement savings of nearly $20,000.

There are certain impediments to refinancing that disproportionately impact Black homeowners, including a high loan amount compared to the value of the home, low credit scores and employment issues, Golding said. And some lenders are not interested in refinancing lower balance loans because of the fixed costs of refinancing, he added.

Black households are stuck with higher rates as a result, said Golding. "Yet these are the homeowners who we should care about the most and you reduce the risk in the system when you have lower payments."
 

Ish Gibor

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Within recent years a lot of these reports have been published. It exposes that old systemic institutionalized racism is still prevalent. Yet according to the Trump administration there is not such thing. Several people in his administration have made this claim.

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A final warning has been issued to stop spreading this lie.
 
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Cynic

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True Wealth isn't built through home ownership .....

Go ahead and name the richest landlord :childplease:
 

.r.

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Shopping around isn't gonna fix the gap between 2 sets of people. Black people shop around, they do not have the wealth to live wherever they want to.

And you know this how??
 

.r.

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Ish Gibor

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True Wealth isn't built through home ownership .....

Go ahead and name the richest landlord :childplease:
Wealth fundamentally is based on home ownership and life insurance. Every economics will tell you this. But it has to do with the value of the property. This is why Black people are getting gentrified.

https://www.jchs.harvard.edu/sites/default/files/hbtl-06.pdf


"The Duke study divided households into low-, medium-, and high-income groups and found that white households in every income group spent more on average than black households in the same group. On average, white households spent $13,700 per quarter, compared to $8,400 for black households. Even after accounting for factors such as family structure, income, occupation, and geography, as well as wealth and homeownership, white households at all income levels continued to spend more than comparable black households, with low-income white households spending $1,200 more per quarter than low-income black households and high-income white households spending $1,400 more than their black counterparts."

http://www.demos.org/sites/default/files/publications/Asset Value of Whiteness.pdf


"Redlining refers to a discriminatory pattern of disinvestment and obstructive lending practices that act as an impediment to home ownership among African Americans and other people of color. Banks used the concept to deny loans to homeowners and would-be homeowners who lived in these neighborhoods. This in turn resulted in neighborhood economic decline and the withholding of services or their provision at an exceptionally high cost.

The origin of the term stems from the policies developed by the Home Owners Loan Corporation (HOLC) created in 1933 by the Franklin Roosevelt Administration to reduce home foreclosures during the Depression and then institutionalized by the 1937 U.S. Housing Act which established the Federal Housing Association (FHA). Federal housing agencies including the HOLC and the FHA determined whether areas were deemed unfit for investment by banks, insurance companies, savings and loan associations, and other financial services companies."

Redlining (1937- )



 
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Rawtid

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I didn't buy a home as an investment, it was way to stabalize my housing costs and more effective fail safe than renting could provide. When I ran into financial issues, I went 377 days without making a mortgage payment, if I were renting, I had 60-90 days TOPS! I mean I did have to file Chapter 13 to get caught up, but even now my mortage is only $785, that's including taxes and insurance.

I'm also a big fan of shared living/finances. A lot of adults are living together, but not collaborating financially. I don't see how it's mad adults with jobs living under one roof, but mfs are still struggling. Yall should form like voltron and make some moves.

The solution for me was to change the way I view things. I know there is a gap, but my goal isn't to "catch up" to white people, it's to move strategically within a racist system. It's never going to be fair and we'll just keep uncovering the efforts taken to sabotage us. Hell, the deed history for my home shows racist covenants where it could only be sold to whites.
 

Cynic

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Wealth fundamentally is based on home ownership and life insurance. Every economics will tell you this. But it has to do with the value of the property. This is why Black people are getting gentrified.

Businesses have better upside and rewards but I see your point.


Small landlords make money on the increased value of the property, when the property is sold, and the landlord retires.

Medium sized landlords break even on cash flow, and typically also have day jobs, so they make money by continuing to work.

Large landlords make money on cash flow.




The 20 Richest Real Estate Investors in the World (Updated for 2020)

There are other factors to consider including capital gains tax and downturns/job market
 
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True Wealth isn't built through home ownership .....

Go ahead and name the richest landlord :childplease:


That's EXACTLY how wealth is built lol. Name a wealthy person that doesn't own any properties. Particularly for the average person, their biggest asset is their home because they have equity in it. If you have a paid off house you can pass down to your children, that is typically the most attainable way for a normal person to transfer wealth.
 
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