Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Essay 4252


From nationwide news sources…

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Study: ‘Discrimination has not disappeared’
MORTGAGES | Study finds disparities among home loans to blacks, Hispanics

BY ALAN ZIBEL The Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- Higher income does not protect blacks and Hispanics from receiving mortgage loans with above-market rates, a new study by a group pushing for reforms to lending laws says.

The report, released by the Washington-based National Community Reinvestment Coalition, concludes that in 2005 blacks in 171 metropolitan areas were at least twice as likely as whites to receive expensive loans.

The study was based on an analysis of nationwide mortgage data collected by the Federal Reserve for the most recent year available. The report, which analyzed thousands of loans in 380 metro areas, also concluded that while the disparity among blacks and whites existed at all income levels, it was more severe at higher income levels, rather than lower ones.

The study found that middle-class and upper income blacks in 167 metropolitan areas were at least twice as likely as whites with similar incomes to receive loans with high rates. By comparison, there were 70 metropolitan areas where low-income blacks faced a similar likelihood of receiving above-market rates.

Low-income blacks in all areas were more likely to have pricey loans than whites with similar incomes. The report uses the Federal Reserve’s definition of high-cost loans: mortgages whose rates are at least 3 percentage points above Treasury securities. That definition includes most subprime loans given to people with weak credit records.

The study points to the persistence of discrimination against minorities, said John Taylor, chief executive of the Washington-based group.

“Certainly discrimination has not disappeared in this country, by any stretch,” he said.

The Mortgage Bankers Association criticized the report, saying it focuses on race instead of factors that lenders consider when deciding whether to make loans, such as borrowers’ debt levels.

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