Even though the American
housing market valuations have improved since the Great Recession, the
improvements have not been evenly distributed, particularly when one looks at
the data based on ethnic and racial background.
According to the Federal Reserve's triennial 2014 Survey of Consumer
Finances, the percentage of American families owning a primary
residence dropped from 67.3 percent to 65.2 percent between 2010 and 2013,
continuing a trend that has been in place since 2004 when the homeownership
rate was 69.1 percent. Over the three year period, the median and mean
value of primary residences fell in real terms (inflation
adjusted) by 7 percent and 6 percent respectively; this decline is
particularly surprising given the widespread perception that housing prices
took off between 2010 and 2013 in nominal terms.
Now, let's look at a
study by the Economic Policy Institute that relates the recovery of home prices
and its relationship to ethnic and racial background of the homeowner.
Here is a graph showing the percentage change in median home values by
race and ethnicity between 2004 and 2013:
Between 2004 and 2007,
all three groups (whites, blacks and Hispanics) saw the value of their homes
rise as follows:
Whites: +10.4 percent
Blacks: +30.1 percent
Hispanics: +29.0 percent
During the housing market
plunge between 2007 and 2010, all three groups saw the value of their homes
decline as follows:
Whites: -16.5 percent
Blacks: -23.6 percent
Hispanics: -28.4 percent
Once the housing market
started to rally between 2010 and 2013, there was a substantial difference in
the level of price recovery for each of the three groups as follows:
Whites: -4.6 percent
Blacks: -18.4 percent
Hispanics: +3.7 percent
Since the respondents to
the Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances reported their highest home
values in the 2007 survey, here is what has happened to housing prices for each
of the three groups:
Whites: -20.3 percent
Blacks: -37.7 percent
Hispanics: -25.8 percent
In the past, the
homeownership rate and changes in home values for both African Americans and
Hispanics moved together. Both groups had a homeownership rate of 44
percent in 2013, suggesting that the significant difference in housing prices
is related to the geographic timing of the housing recovery. Hispanic
families tend to make up a larger share of the population in the western region
of the United States where the largest increase in home values took place
during 2012 and early 2013 as shown on this chart for Los Angeles:
This contrasts with the
recovery of real estate valuations in the midwestern and southern regions of
the United States where African-American families make up a larger share of the
population as shown on this chart for Chicago:
It is rather surprising
to see that there is a significant difference in how the housing market
recovery has impacted homeowners based on their ethnic and racial backgrounds
and how uneven the recovery has been. A 2015 study by Elora Raymond, Kyungsoon Wang
and Dan Immergluck examined zip-code-level home value data for the period
from 2001 to 2014 in the Atlanta housing market. The authors found
that many black neighbourhoods, even those with lower degrees of poverty,
exhibited steep price declines with only modest or no recovery following the
crisis while many predominantly white neighbourhoods experienced far less price
volatility during the housing boom and bust and that many have more than
recovered from the modest price declines that they did experience. While
the research does not directly address the reasons behind these patterns, this data also suggests that there is a strong correlation between racial groups and the
recovery of the housing market.
I think some it is also due to the fact when crusty(i don’t know what else to use to describe them) white people get around Latinos or Hispanics they come to terms that although they are brown they are not the lazy good for nothings that their crusty views tell them they should be. Once they learn that they don't have any issues with them moving into their neighborhoods (no white flight occurs). Probably the same thing that Asians went through long ago. Why I use crusty white people as a term is do middle to low class white people who think because they are white they are somehow automatically upper crust society and can thumb their noses at anyone that is in their view socially below them ei anything that is no white like them. Crusty. (I’m white but married to an Honduran) So home values don’t drop just because a few Mexicans moved into the neighborhood.
ReplyDeleteTo anonymous - although YOU display a tremendous amount of self righteous arrogance yourself..you have one thing correct - white people DON'T care who moves in to their neighborhood WHEN they don't bring crime along with them..you might want to look at other info that relates the value of your home to the crime rates in the area and wake up. BTW - good for you - you married a non-white person...go collect your bonus points at the local liberal meeting hall..what an a-hole. If you keep your house up and don't turn the neighborhood in to a place that you fear walking the streets at night most people - including those crusty white people you have issues with (probably because you have an inferiority complex of your own) really don't give a flying fart who moves in.
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