Study: Racial Predatory Loans Sparked Housing Crisis

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EL PRESIDENTE

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:lol: I love the revisionist history here.

"you have to make loans to the minority neighborhoods!"

(market crash)

"everyone was racist! :ohno: "

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6930K520101004

Predatory lending aimed at racially segregated minority neighborhoods led to mass foreclosures that fueled the U.S. housing crisis, according to a new study published in the American Sociological Review.

Predatory lending typically refers to loans that carry unreasonable fees, interest rates and payment requirements.

Poorer minority areas became a focus of these practices in the 1990s with the growth of mortgage-backed securities, which enabled lenders to pool low- and high-risk loans to sell on the secondary market, Professor Douglas Massey of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University and PhD candidate Jacob Rugh, said in their study.

The financial institutions likely to be found in minority areas tended to be predatory -- pawn shops, payday lenders and check cashing services that "charge high fees and usurious rates of interest," they said in the study.

"By definition, segregation creates minority dominant neighborhoods, which, given the legacy of redlining and institutional discrimination, continue to be underserved by mainstream financial institutions," the study says.

Redlining is the practice of denying or increasing the cost of services, such as banking and insurance, to residents in specific areas, often based on race.

The U.S. economy is still struggling with the effects of its longest recession since the 1930s, which was triggered in large part by the housing crisis, which was in part triggered by the crash of the subprime loan market.

Subprime lending refers to loans made to consumers with poor credit and others considered higher risk. They tend to have a higher interest rate than traditional loans.

The study, which used data from the 100 largest U.S. metropolitan areas, found that living in a predominantly African-American area, and to a lesser extent Hispanic area, were "powerful predictors of foreclosures" in the nation.

Even African-Americans with similar credit profiles and down-payment ratios to white borrowers were more likely to receive subprime loans, according to the study.

"As a result, from 1993 to 2000, the share of subprime mortgages going to households in minority neighborhoods rose from 2 to 18 percent," Massey and Rugh said.
 
Well, DUH. But it's not particularly a racist thing.

GW Bush talked about the "Ownership Society" as if he wanted everyone, including people in minority neighborhoods, to be able to own their home. Similarly, Democrats and some Republicans seriously opposed any kind of reform that would have protected the industry from the scale of defaults we saw because they wanted minorities to be able to own their homes as well.
 
George W. Bush, in 1993?

The practice continued through W's presidency.

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/presidentbush/2008/10/blame-bush.html

When he was testifying before Congress the other day about the world's economic crisis, former Bush Treasury Secretary John W. Snow said that too many unqualified people got loans. He suggested that one of the culprits might have been George W. Bush's "ownership society."

Borrowing the concept from conservative thinkers, President Bush began touting an ownership society early in his first term. The idea encompassed a range of policies -- from healthcare to house buying -- in which Republicans believed government should get out of the way and empower individuals to make their own financial decisions. In a fact sheet, the White House said:

The president believes that homeownership is the cornerstone of America's vibrant communities and benefits individual families by building stability and long-term financial security.

Challenging the real estate and mortgage finance industries to "close the gap that exists between the homeownership rates of minorities and non-minorities," the president argued that increasing homeownership would enroll everyone in the fabric of their communities, thus decreasing crime, improving schools and cementing a sense of local civic pride.
 
that's how compassionate conservatism bites you in the ass!
 
I have no beef with people owning property or even getting loans that make it easier to qualify. The issue was a big rate hike on ARM loans hit at the same time as a food shortage (too much food converted to ethanol, yay Green!), oil prices, etc. And the way the loans were packaged for resale.
 
There was class discrimination, not racial. As always, lenders stuck it to poor people while giving the wealthy all the breaks.

Still happening just as much right now as we speak.
 

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