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Racial Discrimination Alive and Well in Finance Biz
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Responding to this post, a Certain Someone writes:
Credit is one of those weird areas where there is a lot of belief in discrimination, but as far as I can tell, not all that much evidence.
[. . .]
Yes, I've seen the research arguing that people in black communities get worse loan terms than their credit score suggests. As far as I can tell, this research failed to control for some pretty major factors, like assets. . .
[. . .]
Most of the aggregate research I've seen fails to reject the null hypothesis that there is no discrimination in loan markets . . .
In terms of discrimination based on the race of the applicant, the best evidence we have is a series of studies based on data from the 1991 Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, with supplementary data supplied by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. Among the factors looked at were individual applicants' financial, employment, and property background variables -- and yes, this data contain info about assets, both liquid and total (which is contrary to the assertion made above that factors like assets are not controlled for in these studies). The original paper by Alicia Munnell et al., which was published in the American Economic Review, the premier academic journal in the economics field, found that applications from blacks and Hispanics were significantly more likely to be rejected than similar applications from whites.
Now, as the economist Kevin Lang points out in his invaluable book Poverty and Discrimination -- a book, I might add, that has received strongly favorable reviews by such right-leaning economists as Arnold Kling (who wrote, "I heart Kevin Lang") and Tyler Cowan Tyler Cowen -- Munnell's original study has been subject to "extensive reanalysis." Critics have pointed out that even though the dataset used in the study is probably the richest we have on the subject, it doesn't, in Lang's words "fully capture all the information available to the banks." This is true; but based on chapter 3 of this book, which reanalyzes the Boston Fed data, Lang concurs with the assessment that the Boston Fed studies "create a presumption that discrimination exists in mortgage lending."
Lang, citing the discussion of audit studies that occur in chapter 2 of the Urban Institute book, also notes that audit studies of the pre-approval loan process "confirm that blacks receive less encouragement to apply and are more likely to be encouraged to apply to other lenders."
There's more: a review of the literature on racial discrimination in credit markets in the current issue of the Annual Review of Sociology
concludes that, although the number of mortgage loans given to blacks and Hispanics has substantially increased over the past two decades, significant discrimination persists:
Nevertheless, the evidence indicates that blacks and Hispanics continue to face higher rejection rates and receive less favorable terms than whites of equal credit risk.
Using a unique and proprietary database of credit histories from a major credit bureau, this paper links location-based information on race with individual credit files. After controlling for the influence of such other place-specific factors as crime, housing vacancy rates, and general population demographics, the paper finds qualitatively large differences in the amount of credit offered to similarly qualified applicants living in Black versus White areas.
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