Wells Fargo, JP Morgan and Bank of America all made big promises to increase Black home ownership. But in every year since Wells Fargo had actually originated fewer mortgages to Black home buyers than it did the year before. The banks are all lending far less to Black home owners today than they did a decade ago or more importantly at the cusp of the Subprime Crisis.
NOTE: This episode originally aired in December 2022.
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In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, some of the biggest mortgage lenders in the US promised to extend billions in new loans to Black homebuyers. That hasn’t happened. Instead, the numbers are going in the opposite direction.
Bloomberg senior economics writer Shawn Donnan joins this episode to talk about why banks have fallen short of the goal–and what it means for families across the country. Dedrick Asante-Muhammad of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition also joins to spell out what needs to be done to fix the problem.
Read more: Big US Banks Fall Short on Promises to Create Black Homeowners
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This episode was produced by: Supervising Producer: Vicki Vergolina, Senior Producer: Kathryn Fink, Producers: Mo Barrow, Michael Falero, Sound Design/Engineer: Gilda Garcia.
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