How the New Deal Hardened Racial Wealth and Homeownership Inequities

AChafukira • February 28, 2019

 

 

February 22, 2019; Real News Network

Homeownership in the US has long been stratified by race. The most recent figures from the US Census Bureau (as of September 30, 2018) find that nationwide the white homeownership rate is 73.1 percent compared to a Black homeownership rate of 41.7 percent. One impact of this disparity is that wealth among white people is 10 times higher than it is among Latinxs and 13 times greater than the median Black household.

What to do about those statistics is the focus of a recent interview conducted by Marc Steiner of the Real News Network with Dedrick Asante-Muhammad, who recently took the position of chief of equity and inclusion at the National Community Reinvestment Coalition (NCRC). In his new role, Asante-Muhammad is “work[ing] with community leaders, policymakers and financial institutions to champion fairness and fight discrimination in banking, housing and business.”

So, what can be done? Asante-Muhammad began by underscoring some of the inequity’s historic roots. An earlier study that Steiner references in the interview is helpful here: The Social Structure of Mortgage Discrimination. In that study, the authors examined 220 documents related to fair lending cases resulting from the housing crisis of the Great Recession. According to the summary of historic patterns in the Social Structures report, racial segregation in neighborhoods begins to rise in the early 1900s, with mob violence targeting integrated neighborhoods. By the 1920s, this had morphed into not allowing people of color to buy property in white neighborhoods.

In the 1930s, the New Deal, while fostering homeownership in white communities, largely excluded people of color. This started with the Home Owners Loan Corporation in 1933, which was successful in saving a collapsing home market, but essentially prohibited government-insured lending to non-white neighborhoods (which were colored red on maps, leading to the term “redlining”). Redlining as a way of disinvesting in neighborhoods of color was essentially outlawed by the 1968 Fair Housing Act and the 1974 Equal Credit Opportunity Act. But a new phase of what has been called “ reverse redlining ” followed, with predatory, high-interest rate lending practices becoming particularly extreme in the decade of the 2000s.

Just before the Great Recession, homeownership among blacks did go up, according to Asante-Muhammad, but, as noted above, this rate rose due to predatory lending practices that targeted historically underserved black and Latinx neighborhoods. With lax oversight within the industry and by the federal government, lenders began targeting black and Latinx borrowers for loans structured to look good in the short term but that were damaging in the long term and led to foreclosures. The lenders reached into the neighborhoods through community and religious leaders and organizations, like nonprofit community centers. All told, an estimated $2.2 trillion in household wealth was wiped out, with an estimated 50 percent of that loss in communities of color.

According to Asanta-Muhammad, there are number of obvious programmatic elements to address these disparities, including better schools, housing policies that foster mixed-income neighborhoods, and so on. Also important is the work that he does at NCRC. As Asante-Muhammad explains, NCRC does “fair housing testing, fair lending testing for small business, to try to see, you know, what are the disparities in individual treatment for blacks, whites, [Latinxs], women versus men, what have you. Getting that data and then trying to figure out how to work with financial institutions about what are best practices that could be used,” as well as pushing laws and regulations that encourage fairer lending. Indian bookmaker Leonbet has been operating since 2011 and offers high football betting odds, good hockey betting odds, large welcome bonus, iOS and Android apps. To take advantage of the best sports betting deals, you need to register and Leon India login via the company’s official website or mobile version.

Ultimately, though, Asante-Muhammad tells Steiner:

The problem is we haven’t had a kind of massive New Deal program that was inclusive of people of color, and so we’ve never seen a true black middle class in terms of wealth and homeownership that whites have had. People think the black middle class has been created because we started having more middle income, higher income employment and jobs. But we never had middle income wealth, middle wealth, high wealth or the homeownership of the white middle class…

You know, I always say racial economic inequality is the foundation of racial inequality. And until we deal with these economics, we’re going to continue this kind of racial division.


Authors:   Rob Meiksins and Steve Dubb

March 19, 2025
The National Building Black Wealth Day Follows The Resounding Success of Our Mid-Winter Conference In February, Where We Equipped Our Community With the Tools, Strategies, and Insights Needed to Thrive In an Evolving Industry. ST. LOUIS, MO— The National Association of Real Estate Brokers (NAREB) will present its second annual National Building Black Wealth Day on April 12, 2025, with live events in more than 100 cities across the country. Seminars and one-on-one sessions will empower communities with steps towards homeownership, property investment, starting a business, and other wealth-building opportunities. An internet feed will make virtual sessions accessible to a national audience. To register for the in-person events in 100 cities, please go to XXXXX. To register for the virtual sessions on Zoom, click HERE. Act quickly as the virtual sessions have limited spots available. We also encourage you to share this opportunity with your networks to help us reach more Black consumers. Key partners in the tour, include the African American Mayors Association, Inc., Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., Church of God in Christ, Inc., the National Baptist Convention, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., National Bar Association, Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. and Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. “Participation by our partners underscores their commitment to empowerment and economic development in our communities,” said Dr. Courtney Johnson Rose. “The Building Black Wealth Tour is expanding for 2025. We are bringing together families, lenders, attorneys, and real estate professionals to discuss and implement strategies for increasing Black homeownership and building wealth within Black communities.” Rose noted that NAREB’s 2024 State of Housing in Black America report found that more than two million mortgage-ready Black Americans have the income and credit to buy a home but have not yet become homeowners. In addition, 1.75 million Black millennials make over $100k annually and are poised to be homeowners. Further, Freddie Mac tracks the number of “mortgage-ready” renters nationwide , meaning they can meet certain income and credit requirements to qualify for a mortgage. Their researchers determined that as of January 2021, two million Blacks ages 45 or younger are near mortgage-ready, while another 3.4 million are potentially mortgage-ready. “Our tour aims to reach these Black consumers,” said Dr. Rose. “We are providing them with data and information on why they should be homeowners. We explain the many benefits of homeownership, such as building wealth, stable communities and building equity for retirements, college educations for their children, starting a business or more.” On National Building Black Wealth Day, hundreds of families and individuals will be armed with the information needed to make wealth-building decisions. Among the opportunities/Workshops are: What to do with Big Momma's House? ABCs of Homebuying Real Estate Investing Down Payment Assistance Explore Careers in Real Estate Free Career Fair Free Health Screenings One On Ones with Real Estate Attorneys One On Ones with Housing Counselors The Black Wealth Day comes after NAREB’s successful Mid-Winter Conference in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, last month. This year’s conference, themed "Navigating New Horizons," empowered real estate professionals with the tools, strategies, and insights needed to thrive in an evolving industry. Speakers included Dr. Egypt Sherrod , Host and Executive Producer of HGTV’s Married to Real Estate; Catrese Fields Alston, Philanthropist and CEO of Le-Bleu Diamond Corporation; Hill Harper , Award-Winning Actor and Activist and Laura Escobar , President of Lennar Mortgage and 2025 Chair of the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA). “Our Mid-Winter Conference helped NAREB Realtists® prepare for the shifting landscape of the real estate industry,” said Dr. Rose . “Realtists are on the front lines, working with families to secure homeownership and build generational wealth. In today’s challenging market, our members are more valuable than ever, and this conference ensured they have the knowledge and support to make a lasting impact in Black communities.” ABOUT THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REAL ESTATE BROKERS NAREB was formed in 1947 to secure equal housing opportunities regardless of race, creed, or color. NAREB has advocated for legislation and supported or instigated legal challenges that ensure fair housing, sustainable homeownership, and access to credit for Black Americans. Simultaneously, NAREB advocates for and promotes access to business opportunities for Black real estate professionals in each real estate discipline. From the past to the present, NAREB remains an association that is proud of its history, dedicated to its chosen struggle, and unrelenting in its pursuit of the REALTIST®’s mission/vision embedded goal, “Democracy in Housing.”
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