Unequal Returns to Housing Investments? A Study of Real Housing Appreciation among Black, White, and Hispanic Households

This article assesses whether housing in predominantly minority and integrated neighborhoods appreciates more slowly than comparable housing in predominantly white communities, and if so, the extent to which inequality is due to neighborhood racial composition per se rather than nonracial socioecono...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social forces 2004-06, Vol.82 (4), p.1523-1551
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description This article assesses whether housing in predominantly minority and integrated neighborhoods appreciates more slowly than comparable housing in predominantly white communities, and if so, the extent to which inequality is due to neighborhood racial composition per se rather than nonracial socioeconomic and housing structure factors. I take a dynamic approach to the issue of housing appreciation, considering both racial, ethnic, and poverty composition at purchase and change in those characteristics over time. I examine differences in real housing appreciation across black, white, and Hispanic households by applying a hedonic price analysis to data from the Health and Retirement Study, combined with data from the 1970, 1980, and 1990 Census. While much of neighborhood appreciation inequality is explained by nonracial (particularly socioeconomic) factors, minority composition continues to exert a significant effect on appreciation even net of these considerations, particularly in highly segregated communities and those that experience large increases in black representation. Unequal housing appreciation has a large negative impact on the overall wealth holdings of mature minority households, and has important implications for racial and ethnic stratification.
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I take a dynamic approach to the issue of housing appreciation, considering both racial, ethnic, and poverty composition at purchase and change in those characteristics over time. I examine differences in real housing appreciation across black, white, and Hispanic households by applying a hedonic price analysis to data from the Health and Retirement Study, combined with data from the 1970, 1980, and 1990 Census. While much of neighborhood appreciation inequality is explained by nonracial (particularly socioeconomic) factors, minority composition continues to exert a significant effect on appreciation even net of these considerations, particularly in highly segregated communities and those that experience large increases in black representation. 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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Business Source Complete; Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); Education Source
subjects African Americans
Appreciation
Black white differences
Censuses
Community Relations
Cultures and civilizations
Dwelling value
Dwellings
Economic aspects
Ethnic minorities
Ethnic relations. Racism
Ethnicity
Family Income
Ghettos
Habitat
Hispanic Americans
Hispanics
Home ownership
Households
Housing
Housing prices
Housing units
Human ecology and demography
Income inequality
Inequality
Investment
Investment plans
Literature Reviews
Minority & ethnic groups
Minority Groups
Neighborhood Improvement
Neighborhoods
Population growth
Poverty
Prices
Public Policy
Race
Racial Composition
Racial Differences
Racial inequalities
Racial Segregation
Residential Patterns
Retirement
Social aspects
Social Inequality
Social Problems
Socioeconomic Factors
Sociology
United States of America
USA
Value (Economics)
Wealth
White people
Whites
title Unequal Returns to Housing Investments? A Study of Real Housing Appreciation among Black, White, and Hispanic Households
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