Against Black Homeownership

ogc163

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The real estate market is so structured by race that black families will never come out ahead.

KEEANGA-YAMAHTTA TAYLOR

In January 1973, George Romney, Nixon’s enigmatic Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, administered an open-ended moratorium on its 1968 initiatives to open up single-family homeownership to low-income borrowers by providing government-backed mortgages. The experiment to make homeownership accessible to everyone ended abruptly with massive foreclosures and abandoned houses, but the questions ignited by these policies persisted. Some analysts insisted that the failure of HUD’s homeownership programs was proof positive that poor people were ill equipped for the responsibilities of
of homeownership.

African Americans experience homeownership in ways that rarely produce the financial benefits typically enjoyed by middle-class white Americans. And they insisted that it more specifically implicated low-income African Americans as “incapable” homeowners. Others pointed to HUD’s obvious mismanagement of these programs as the real culprit in their demise, and, importantly, how the programs gave an industry already known for its racial bias new opportunities to exploit low-income African-Americans. But the lessons from HUD’s experiment were muddled by other economic sensibilities, including the commitment to private property and the centrality of homeownership to the American economy.

Today, homeownership, even for low-income and poor people, is reflexively advised as a way to emerge from poverty, develop assets, and build wealth more generally. The historic levels of wealth inequality that continue to distinguish African Americans from whites are powerful reminders of how the exclusion of Blacks from this asset has generationally impaired Black families in comparison with their white peers. Owning a home as a way to build wealth is touted as an advantage over public or government-sponsored housing. It grounds the assumption that it is better to own than rent. And the greatest assumption of all is that homeownership is the superior way to live in the United States. This, of course, is tied to another indelible truth that homeownership is a central cog in the U.S. economy. Its pivotal role as an economic barometer and motor means that there are endless attempts to make it more accessible to ever-wider groups of people. While these are certainly statements of fact, they should not be confused as statements on the advisability of suturing economic well-being to a privately owned asset in a society where the value of that asset will be weighed by the race or ethnicity of whoever possesses it.

The assumption that a mere reversal of exclusion to inclusion would upend decades of institutional discrimination underestimated the investments in the economy organized around race and property. The concept of race and especially racial inferiority helped to establish the “economic floor” in the housing market. One’s proximity to African Americans individually, as well as to their communities, helped to determine the value of one’s property. This revealed another reality. Markets, as in the means by which the exchange of commodities is facilitated, do not exist in vacuums, nor do abstract notions of “supply and demand” dictate their function. Markets are conceived and constituted by desire, imagination, and social aspirations, among other malleable factors. This does not mean that markets are not real, but that they are not shaped by need alone. They are shaped by political, social, economic, and in the case of housing, racial concerns. And in the United States, these market conditions were shaped and stoked by economic actors that stood to gain by curtailing access to one portion of the market while then flooding another with credit, capital, and indiscriminate access to distressed and substandard homes.

HUD’s crisis in its homeownership programs in the 1970s reveal deeper and more systemic problems with the pursuit of homeownership as a way to improve the quality of one’s life. It is undeniable that homeownership in the United States has been “one of the important ways in which Americans have traditionally acquired financial capital” and that the “tax advantages, the accumulation of equity, and the increased value of real estate property enable homeowners to build economic assets. . . . These assets can be used to educate one’s children, to take advantage of business opportunities, to meet financial emergencies, and to provide for retirement.” Investment in homeownership, and its role in the process of the personal accumulation of capital, has been fundamental to the good life in the United States.

Markets are not shaped by need alone. They are shaped by political, social, economic, and in the case of housing, racial concerns.

The benefits of owning a home, however, have been experienced unevenly. The diminished access of African Americans to homeownership has been identified as a significant “consequence” of Black inequality.

Rest of the article here... Against Black Homeownership
 

Strapped

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Potus said no one wants to hire negros so we have no money to own
 

get these nets

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I read a shorter version of this and didn't know that it was an excerpt from her book.
Do you know of any policy changes or alternatives/solutions that were suggested in the book?
 

ogc163

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Black homeownership trails other groups. What it means for millennials looking to buy

The homeownership rate for black Americans fell under 41% in 2019 — pushing it below the levels in the years immediately after racial discrimination in housing was banned more than 50 years ago.

Gaps in homeownership rates exacerbate existing racial wealth disparities and hamper the financial stability of the broader community, said Donnell Williams, president of the National Association of Real Estate Brokers, who recently spoke to the group’s Charlotte chapter.

“It affects generations. Your children and your children’s children,” he said. “Because once we own our home, it is financial security.

During the second quarter of 2019, 40.6% of African Americans nationwide were homeowners. That’s lower than the rate in 1970, just two years after the Fair Housing Act passed. It protects Americans against housing discrimination based on race, religion, sex and other demographic characteristics.

The homeowner rate for black Americans rebounded to 44% by the end of 2019, but was still far lower than 73.7% of white Americans and 65.1% of all Americans who owned a home, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Williams shared the findings of his organization’s annual “State of Housing in Black America” report, which details homeownership rates, loan patterns and economic mobility for African Americans.

That disparity now has reached a key demographic: white millennials are homeowners at nearly three times the rate of their black counterparts — 46% to 16%, respectively, according to the report.

Millennials slow to enter the market
About 1.7 million black millennials in the United States earning $100,000 a year are financially ready to buy but haven’t, Williams said. People in that generation — those born between 1981 and 1996 — aren’t buying homes at the rate their parents and grandparents did, the report shows.

“These are the lingering effects of the recession,” Williams said. “They may have seen Mom and Dad get foreclosed on. They may be, for first time in their whole family, homeowners.”

Other factors, including student loans and credit issues increase financial pressure on younger potential borrowers and leave many thinking buying a house isn’t possible for them, said Faith Triggs, a real estate broker and member of Charlotte Crown Black Real Estate Association.

Financial counseling and down payment assistance can help get them ready, she said, but it can take much longer than other clients. Triggs said she sees the long-standing effects of now-outlawed discriminatory practices like redlining, when the government and private sector excluded African Americans from buying homes in certain neighborhoods and denied access to loans and other financial services.

“We have all of these all these issues with particularly within the black community because we have been abused by the system,” she said. “We (as real estate agents) have to go back in and build trust.

https://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/business/article240689276.html
 

Serious

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Hate to say, but we need to take relationships and families more seriously. Discrimination and wage gaps aside, regarding those black millennials that do make 100k+ are they really in a position to settle down and plant roots. Or they just playing the field.

Homeownership is a big commitment.
 

ogc163

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Hate to say, but we need to take relationships and families more seriously. Discrimination and wage gaps aside, regarding those black millennials that do make 100k+ are they really in a position to settle down and plant roots. Or they just playing the field.

Homeownership is a big commitment.

It's a difficult conversation because its mostly a values based conversation, but the data doesn't generally support aspiring to a traditionalist upper middle class lifestyle. :yeshrug: And this is especially true for Black folks living in expensive cities imo. A cosmopolitan lifestyle and long term traditionalist aspirations don't synch up below a certain income point. Thus, the advice I give younger folks is to figure out what type of lifestyle they want to live early, and acknowledge that generally our tradeoffs and downside risks are more substantial that white folks.
 

Serious

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It's a difficult conversation because its mostly a values based conversation, but the data doesn't generally support aspiring to a traditionalist upper middle class lifestyle. :yeshrug: And this is especially true for Black folks living in expensive cities imo. A cosmopolitan lifestyle and long term traditionalist aspirations don't synch up below a certain income point. Thus, the advice I give younger folks is to figure out what type of lifestyle they want to live early, and acknowledge that generally our tradeoffs and downside risks are more substantial that white folks.
Right but get this, what does a 20 or 30 something know about what they want out of life.

Commitment can seem like prison, but losing on out asset has long term consequences.

Especially since, those of us who are more affluent, are not doing it collectively in large enough numbers to support a strong middle class community.
 

AnonymityX1000

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It's a difficult conversation because its mostly a values based conversation, but the data doesn't generally support aspiring to a traditionalist upper middle class lifestyle. :yeshrug: And this is especially true for Black folks living in expensive cities imo. A cosmopolitan lifestyle and long term traditionalist aspirations don't synch up below a certain income point. Thus, the advice I give younger folks is to figure out what type of lifestyle they want to live early, and acknowledge that generally our tradeoffs and downside risks are more substantial that white folks.
Yeah, I have been on the fence regarding this issue for the last few years, I came very close to buying a condo until my mortgage bank tried to jack up my rate in the 4th quarter of closing. I have done informal surveys of people of many ethnic backgrounds but mostly Black people and I would say on a 70/30 to 65/35 % basis most people say it's not worth it. They lost money on the entire endeavor. I live in NYC and prefer city life over moving to the suburbs. But if I'm going to move to the suburbs it better be a good investment, otherwise I see no point.
 
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