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Chapter 9 Federal Housing Policies: Part Two © OnCourse Learning
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Chapter 9 Learning Objectives Understand how federal laws protect the home buyer from discrimination in sales and financing Understand the theories of discrimination Understand the types of discrimination 2 © OnCourse Learning
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Fair Housing Act (1968) Part of Civil Rights Act of 1968 Prohibits discrimination in sale or renting of residential housing on the basis of race, color, religion, or national origin Gender was added as a protected class by the Housing and Community Development Act in 1974 © OnCourse Learning 3
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Fair Housing Act (1968) Families (with children under 18) and the handicapped protected under the Fair Housing Amendment Act of 1988 The act exempts some property owners from its provisions E.g. an owner-occupant who does not employ a broker or uses discriminatory advertising to sell or rent the properties 4 © OnCourse Learning
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Fair Housing Amendment Act of 1988 According to the Act it is unlawful to: 1.Refuse to sell or rent or make unavailable a residential dwelling to protected groups 2.Modify the terms of conditions of a sale or rental on the basis of group membership 3.Advertise that sale or rental is available only to certain groups 4.Represent to any member of a protected group that a residential dwelling is unavailable for sale when it is 5 © OnCourse Learning
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Fair Housing Amendment Act of 1988 Unlawful to: 5.Induce sale of dwelling unit by representing that individuals of any classification re moving to the neighborhood (known as blockbusting) 6.Modify the terms of a mortgage based on the classification of the borrower in a protected group 7.Deny access to a MLS to any individual in a protected group 8.Deny or make different terms for home loans by commercial lenders 6 © OnCourse Learning
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Equal Credit Opportunity Act (1974) Prevents discrimination in the credit market based on gender and marital status Extended to protect on basis of age, race, national origin, religion, color, welfare recipient and those previously filing with ECOA © OnCourse Learning 7
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Equal Credit Opportunity Act (1974) The Act prohibits lenders from requesting the following information: Whether or not the applicant has children Whether or not there exist child care problems Whether or not there may be interruption of income due to future childbirth Whether or not the applicant receives alimony, child support, or separate maintenance Whether or not the applicant is widowed, divorced, or single Whether or not the applicant has a listed telephone number 8 © OnCourse Learning
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Identifying Discrimination Effects method – Minority groups are underrepresented in the class of credit recipients relative to general population Intent approach – Lender intends to treat minorities differently Practices method – Lender fails to adhere to established guidelines © OnCourse Learning 9
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Economic Theory of Discrimination Preference for discrimination - Having a “taste” for discrimination gives psychological satisfaction Economics of information - Cost of obtaining information may be greater than the benefits (marital status or young single males are examples) © OnCourse Learning 10
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Empirical Evidence of Discrimination Group membership and credit risk Females have better payment record than male Older borrowers have better payment histories Weak evidence that married debtors have lower credit risks Race – significant factor 11 © OnCourse Learning
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Empirical Evidence of Discrimination Existence of discrimination Difference in the default rate between members of a group and general debtor, as lenders may require higher standards for that group Application of tougher qualifying standards 12 © OnCourse Learning
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Effects of ECOA Discrimination by firms is costly in the long-run Evidence suggest that discrimination in the credit markets was not pervasive prior to ECOA Legislation should have little or no impact on total credit available or its distribution among potential borrowers 13 © OnCourse Learning
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Effects of ECOA Post-ECOA studies show that legislation has not increased credit available to protected classes; the opposite may have occurred By preventing lenders from considering group membership, credit available to some protected classes may have been reduced 14 © OnCourse Learning
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Effects of the Fair Housing Act (FHA) Greater access to housing for minorities Housing laws appear to be more important than equal credit laws 15 © OnCourse Learning
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Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (1975) Discourages lending institutions from avoiding certain neighborhoods Followed by the Community Reinvestment Act in 1978 which encourages lenders to evaluate lending patterns in their defined community Discourages “redlining” or “FHAing” a neighborhood Redlining – lenders “draw” a red line on a map indicating neighborhood within which they would not make mortgage loans © OnCourse Learning 16
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Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1988 Prohibits discrimination in renting on basis of age, number and gender of children, and disabilities Housing includes apartment complexes, single-family homes, condos, co-ops, and mobile homes Exemptions for older adults Handicap may be physical or mental © OnCourse Learning 17
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