Literature DB >> 35992214

Persistence of mortgage lending bias in the United States: 80 years after the Home Owners' Loan Corporation security maps.

Sima Namin1, Yuhong Zhou1, Wei Xu2, Emily McGinley1, Courtney Jankowski1, Purushottam Laud1, Kirsten Beyer1.   

Abstract

Housing discrimination and racial segregation have a long history in the United States. The 1930's Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC) "residential security maps," recently digitized, have become a popular visualization of Depression era mortgage lending risk patterns across American cities. Numerous housing policies have since been instituted, including the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA), but mortgage lending bias persists. The degree to which detailed spatial patterns of bias have persisted or changed along with urban change is not well understood. We compare historic HOLC grades and contemporary levels of mortgage lending bias using spatially detailed HMDA data. We further examine the relationship between HOLC risk grades and contemporary racial and ethnic settlement patterns. Results suggest that historical mortgage lending risk categorizations and settlement patterns are associated with contemporary mortgage lending bias and racial and ethnic settlement patterns. Concerted and deliberate efforts will be needed to change these patterns.

Entities:  

Keywords:  housing discrimination; mortgage lending bias; racial segregation; redlining; settlement patterns

Year:  2022        PMID: 35992214      PMCID: PMC9387904          DOI: 10.1080/26884674.2021.2019568

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Race Ethn City        ISSN: 2688-4674


  4 in total

1.  Institutional racism and pregnancy health: using Home Mortgage Disclosure act data to develop an index for Mortgage discrimination at the community level.

Authors:  Dara D Mendez; Vijaya K Hogan; Jennifer Culhane
Journal:  Public Health Rep       Date:  2011 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 2.792

2.  New spatially continuous indices of redlining and racial bias in mortgage lending: links to survival after breast cancer diagnosis and implications for health disparities research.

Authors:  Kirsten M M Beyer; Yuhong Zhou; Kevin Matthews; Amin Bemanian; Purushottam W Laud; Ann B Nattinger
Journal:  Health Place       Date:  2016-05-09       Impact factor: 4.078

3.  Race, gender, and marriage: destination selection during the Great Migration.

Authors:  Katherine J Curtis White; Kyle Crowder; Stewart E Tolnay; Robert M Adelman
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2005-05

4.  The Legacy of the 1968 Fair Housing Act.

Authors:  Douglas S Massey
Journal:  Sociol Forum (Randolph N J)       Date:  2015-06-02
  4 in total

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