A Multi-Ethnic Public Policy Research and Advocacy Institute

Connect

  • Facebook | Twitter | Youtube facebook Twitter YouTube

Show All Initiatives

Sidebar

Support our mission.

DonateNow

Or, click here for more options.

Sidebar

The Greenlining Institute

1918 University Avenue
2nd Floor
Berkeley, CA  94704

T: 510.926.4001
F: 510.926.4010

info@greenlining.org

eNEWSLETTER

Type your email address below to sign up for our electronic newsletter.

Related Research

America's Top Housing Official Must Aid Struggling Homeowners
May 14, 2012 — The Huffington Post by:Preeti Vissa If one man can be described as absolutely key to solving the... [ More ]

Losing end
May 02, 2012 — San Francisco Chronicle by: Andrew S. Ross Losing end: That 9.8 percent figure ... [ More ]

Study finds more bank branches, but only in higher-income areas
May 01, 2012 — A new study finds the number of bank and thrift offices has risen 8.4% since 2006 in areas with median incomes of $10... [ More ]

More News

Related Research

“Expanding Sustainable Homeownership for Communities of Color in the Wake of the Foreclosure Crisis”

Because households of color hold a disproportionate share of their net worth in home equity (at 61%), the disparat...

View Publication

More Research

Homeownership


People of Color Less Likely to own a Home

Homeownership is the single largest source of wealth creation for Americans.  Fully 31% of American wealth is in home equity, and 69% of the general population owns a home.  Lower homeownership rates among people of color therefore directly translate to slower wealth creation relative to Whites.  The reasons for this imbalance are largely due to historic discrimination.

While 74.9% of Whites in the United States as a whole own their homes, only 59.1% of Asians, 47.5% of Blacks and 48.9% of Latinos do. [1]  In California, 58.1% of the population owns their home, including 68.4% of Whites, 60.4% of Asians, 41.7% of Blacks, and 45.7% of Latinos.


[1] United for a Fair Economy- The Silent Depression State of the Dream 2009 http://www.faireconomy.org/files/pdf/state_of_dream_2009.pdf

Segregation and home equity

If the difficulty of home purchase is compounded for lower-income people, it is further compounded for lower-income people of color.  David Rusk has shown that across the nation's metropolitan areas in 2001, African Americans realized 18% less equity from their homes than Whites, controlling for income.  This means that "for every dollar of income, white homeowners owned $2.64 worth of house.  By contrast, Black homeowners owned only $2.16 worth of house."[2]  He therefore concludes that African Americans pay a de-facto "segregation tax" by virtue of their race.  This equity disparity between Whites and Blacks has serious implications for wealth creation.


[2] Rusk, David.  "The 'Segregation Tax': The Cost of Racial Segregation to Black Homeowners."  The Brookings Institution Center on Urban & Metropolitan Policy.  October 2001.  Available at http://www.brookings.edu/urban.

Related Publications

HMDA FY2007 Full Report

FISCAL YEAR 2007 UPDATE.  The credit crunch has hit communities of color hardest, particularly lower-income communities of color.  The mortgage industry as a whole originated 39.3% less loans to Latinos this fiscal year, and 34.1% less loans to African Americans.  The most dramatic decrease has been among lower-income African American borrowers, who received 72.4% less loans this year than last year.  These changes, combined with the disproportionate loss of wealth in communities of color due to foreclosures, are likely to widen the homeownership gap even further.

2008 Bank Board Diversity Report

Home Page