Racial Dynamics of Subprime Mortgage Lending at the Peak

被引:96
|
作者
Faber, Jacob W. [1 ]
机构
[1] NYU, Dept Sociol, New York, NY 10003 USA
关键词
homeownership; minorities; mortgages; predatory lending; segregation; RACE; CRISIS;
D O I
10.1080/10511482.2013.771788
中图分类号
F0 [经济学]; F1 [世界各国经济概况、经济史、经济地理]; C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
0201 ; 020105 ; 03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Subprime mortgage lending in the early 2000s was a leading cause of the Great Recession. From 2003 to 2006, subprime loans jumped from 7.6% of the mortgage market to 20.1%, with black and Latino borrowers receiving a disproportionate share. This article leveraged the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data and multinomial regression to model home-purchase mortgage lending in 2006, the peak of the housing boom. The findings expose a complicated story of race and income. Consistent with previous research, blacks and Latinos were more likely and Asians less likely to receive subprime loans than whites were. Income was positively associated with receipt of subprime loans for minorities, whereas the opposite was true for whites. When expensive (jumbo) loans were excluded from the sample, regressions found an even stronger, positive association between income and subprime likelihood for minorities, supporting the theory that wealthier minorities were targeted for subprime loans when they could have qualified for prime loans. This finding also provides another example of an aspect of American life in which minorities are unable to leverage higher class position in the same way as whites are. Contrary to previous research, model estimates did not find that borrowers paid a penalty (in increased likelihood of subprime outcome) for buying homes in minority communities.
引用
收藏
页码:328 / 349
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Racial Patterns in Mortgage Lending Outcomes During and After the Subprime Boom
    Haupert, Tyler
    HOUSING POLICY DEBATE, 2019, 29 (06) : 947 - 976
  • [2] The neighborhood distribution of subprime mortgage lending
    Calem, PS
    Gillen, K
    Wachter, S
    JOURNAL OF REAL ESTATE FINANCE AND ECONOMICS, 2004, 29 (04): : 393 - 410
  • [3] Special issue on subprime mortgage lending
    Green, Richard
    Sanders, Anthony B.
    Wachter, Susan
    JOURNAL OF HOUSING ECONOMICS, 2008, 17 (04) : 253 - 253
  • [4] The Neighborhood Distribution of Subprime Mortgage Lending
    Paul S. Calem
    Kevin Gillen
    Susan Wachter
    The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, 2004, 29 : 393 - 410
  • [5] Subprime mortgage lending and older borrowers
    Hermanson, SK
    Raca, P
    Zorn, P
    GERONTOLOGIST, 2001, 41 : 106 - 107
  • [6] FORECLOSURE, SUBPRIME MORTGAGE LENDING, AND THE MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEM
    Peterson, Christopher L.
    UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI LAW REVIEW, 2010, 78 (04) : 1359 - 1407
  • [7] Subprime mortgage and predatory lending law developments
    Caggiano, Julie R.
    Franzen, Therese G.
    Howell, Leslie M.
    BUSINESS LAWYER, 2008, 63 (02): : 625 - 638
  • [8] Engineering climate debt: temperature overshoot and peak-shaving as risky subprime mortgage lending
    Asayama, Shinichiro
    Hulme, Mike
    CLIMATE POLICY, 2019, 19 (08) : 937 - 946
  • [9] Racial Discrimination and Mortgage Lending
    Kau, James B.
    Keenan, Donald C.
    Munneke, Henry J.
    JOURNAL OF REAL ESTATE FINANCE AND ECONOMICS, 2012, 45 (02): : 289 - 304
  • [10] Racial Discrimination and Mortgage Lending
    James B. Kau
    Donald C. Keenan
    Henry J. Munneke
    The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, 2012, 45 : 289 - 304