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Articles

Evidence and Actions on Mortgage Market Disparities: Research, Fair Lending Enforcement, and Consumer Protection

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Pages 769-794
Received 06 Jul 2018
Accepted 05 Sep 2018
Published online: 10 Dec 2018

ABSTRACT

In this article, we present an overview of the research on discrimination in mortgage underwriting and pricing, the experiences of minority borrowers both prior to and during the financial crisis, and federal efforts to mitigate foreclosures during the crisis. We next discuss the history of legal cases alleging disparate treatment of minority borrowers, and recent cases alleging disparate impact in the wake of the Supreme Court’s Inclusive Communities decision. Using these discussions as a background, we examine and discuss mortgage regulations issued by the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau following the financial crisis, describe recent developments in the FinTech industry and explore the implications for fair lending policy and minority borrowers more generally. Finally, we draw conclusions and make recommendations for improving the mortgage market outcomes of minority borrowers and increasing minority borrowers’ access to credit.

Acknowledgment

We are grateful for the advice and constructive comments provide by Lei Ding and two anonymous referees.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Marsha J. Courchane

Marsha J. Courchane is Vice President and Practice Leader of Financial Economics at Charles River Associates. She engages in research and consulting, and serves as a testifying expert in litigation matters with respect to mortgage markets, discrimination in lending, consumer credit, credit scoring, credit risk, and redlining issues. She has published extensively in several academic journals, and is a member of Counselors in Real Estate (CRE) and the Executive Vice President of the American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association (2008–current). She previously held positions at Freddie Mac, at the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and at various universities in the United States, Canada, and New Zealand. She received her BA, MA and PhD from Northwestern University.

Stephen L. Ross

Stephen L. Ross (PhD, Syracuse University) is an urban economist whose research focuses on understanding the experiences of disadvantaged groups, especially African Americans, in U.S. cities. He studies peer effects and social interactions, neighborhood effects, residential and school segregation, housing and mortgage lending discrimination, urban labor markets, racial profiling, and local government. He has published over 50 articles in scholarly journals including the Journal of Political Economy, as well as a major book, The Color of Credit, with MIT Press. He has consulted on major fair lending projects for the Urban Institute, Abt Associates, the New York State Attorney General’s Office, and Fannie Mae.
 

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