Limit search to available items
Record 5 of 17
Previous Record Next Record
Book Cover
E-book
Author Ross, Stephen L.

Title The color of credit : mortgage discrimination, research methodology, and fair-lending enforcement / Stephen Ross and John Yinger
Published Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, 2003

Copies

Description 1 online resource (viii, 459 pages) : illustrations
Contents The mortgage market and the definition of mortgage lending discrimination -- A conceptual framework for mortgage lending -- The literature on mortgage lending discrimination up to and including the Boston Fed study -- Accounting for variation in underwriting standards across lenders -- Other dimensions of discrimination: pricing, redlining, and cultural affinity -- Using performance data to study mortgage discrimination: evaluating the default approach -- Lender behavior, loan performance, and disparate-impact discrimination -- Implications for fair-lending enforcement
Summary An analysis of current findings on mortgage-lending discrimination and suggestions for new procedures to improve its detection. In 2000, homeownership in the United States stood at an all-time high of 67.4 percent, but the homeownership rate was more than 50 percent higher for non-Hispanic whites than for blacks or Hispanics. Homeownership is the most common method for wealth accumulation and is viewed as critical for access to the most desirable communities and most comprehensive public services. Homeownership and mortgage lending are linked, of course, as the vast majority of home purchases are made with the help of a mortgage loan. Barriers to obtaining a mortgage represent obstacles to attaining the American dream of owning one's own home. These barriers take on added urgency when they are related to race or ethnicity. In this book Stephen Ross and John Yinger discuss what has been learned about mortgage-lending discrimination in recent years. They re-analyze existing loan-approval and loan-performance data and devise new tests for detecting discrimination in contemporary mortgage markets. They provide an in-depth review of the 1996 Boston Fed Study and its critics, along with new evidence that the minority-white loan-approval disparities in the Boston data represent discrimination, not variation in underwriting standards that can be justified on business grounds. Their analysis also reveals several major weaknesses in the current fair-lending enforcement system, namely, that it entirely overlooks one of the two main types of discrimination (disparate impact), misses many cases of the other main type (disparate treatment), and insulates some discriminating lenders from investigation. Ross and Yinger devise new procedures to overcome these weaknesses and show how the procedures can also be applied to discrimination in loan-pricing and credit-scoring
Analysis ECONOMICS/Public Economics
SOCIAL SCIENCES/Political Science/Public Policy & Law
URBANISM/Urban History
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 425-442) and indexes
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Discrimination in mortgage loans -- United States
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Real Estate -- Mortgages.
Discrimination in mortgage loans
Huiseigenaren.
Leningen.
Hypotheken.
Discriminatie (sociologie)
United States
Verenigde Staten.
Form Electronic book
Author Yinger, John, 1947-
ISBN 9780262282604
0262282607
0585456658
9780585456652
0262264331
9780262264334