Is There a Gender Gap in Home Equity Loans?
Reviewed by Doretha Clemon
In a country with a demonstrated gender pay gap, the ability to buy a home, build home equity, and access credit, such as a home equity loan, is also fraught with discrimination and difficulty. Single women homeowners tend to build less home equity over time versus single men—at 92 cents to the dollar compared to single men. Women who earn less than their male counterparts tend to put smaller down payments when buying a home, making it more challenging to build home equity and their net worth.
Whether these factors are attributable to an inequitable economic landscape or discriminatory behavior and assumptions on the part of lenders can be challenging to pin down. More likely, it’s a complex interplay between the institutional and the individual. Exploring the history of anti-discrimination legislation in mortgage lending, as well as the current gap in home lending data, can perhaps explain further.
Key Takeaways
- Due to the gender pay gap, women—especially women of color—face disparities in building wealth through home equity, net worth, and accessing fair credit.
- Single women typically build less home equity than their single male counterparts by 92 cents to the dollar.
- Housing lending data, via the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA), paints an incomplete picture of gendered differences in home equity loans.
- There has been a long history of discriminatory lending in the United States, which several pieces of legislation have attempted to address.
- Better data collection, AI, and fintech may help identify gender gaps in home equity lending, but analyzing the data responsibly is critical.
A Brief History of Anti-Discriminatory Mortgage Lending Legislation
The practice of redlining, which generally refers to discriminatory lending behavior based on race and ethnicity, has been well-documented throughout recent history. In 2016, the term “pinklining” was coined to describe the financial sector’s systematic exploitation of women. However, even before it had a name, gender discrimination in the lending landscape was rampant and structural.
As recently as the 1970s, women weren’t allowed to sign a loan in their own name and had to either find a co-signer or sign under their husband’s name if they were married. It was also common not to count a working woman’s portion of a family’s income if she applied for a mortgage with her husband. Single women also faced many difficulties in getting loans approved.
Legislation to Fight Discrimination
Several pieces of anti-discrimination legislation came into play in the late twentieth century. The Fair Housing Act of 1968 came about as part of the Civil Rights Act and outlawed discrimination in housing-related purchasing, renting, and lending activities.
In the 1970s, the Congressional finding that lenders often denied credit applications on the basis of some sort of discrimination (be it gender, race, marital status, religion, or age, to name just a few) fueled the creation of the 1974 Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA).
The Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) followed in 1977 and was meant to address redlining and other anti-consumer and anti-business policies and behaviors. By systematically refusing to lend to minorities or invest in low-income areas, financial institutions were denying basic credit needs that could have contributed to the growth and success of their people and neighborhoods.
Therefore, the CRA supposedly “requires the Federal Reserve and other federal banking regulators to encourage financial institutions to help meet the credit needs of the communities in which they do business, including low- and moderate-income (LMI) neighborhoods.”
The Efficacy of Legislation
Unfortunately, there has been much indication that these laws are imperfect and insufficient in preventing discrimination. For example, a comprehensive 1996 legal paper argues that the “responsibility for enforcing fair-lending and anti-insurance discrimination laws” should not “fall on the shoulders of federal and state agencies” as “courts, themselves, allow race, gender and other impermissible variables to influence both procedural and substantive rulings.”
Meanwhile, a 2009 report by the National Council of Negro Women and the National Community Reinvestment Coalition found that although many cases of discrimination had been reported to the Federal Reserve Board under the CRA, enforcement and follow up have been lacking from the governing body that’s meant to carry out further investigation.
The Gender Wage Gap and Women’s Access to Credit
The gender wage gap also impacts women’s access to wealth and credit, going beyond a mere difference in earnings. Due to predatory lending practices, such as steering women towards subprime or predatory credit and barriers in accessing fair credit, women, and women of color, in particular, face disparities in overall net worth, not just income. This negatively impacts their ability to build credit.
A home equity loan is a type of secured installment loan in which the borrower uses their home equity as collateral. The amount of home equity determines the potential loan amount. Usually, the maximum amount one can borrow is equal to about 80% of their home equity.
Unfortunately, when it comes to home equity, single women build less over time than their male counterparts (calculated as 92 cents to the dollar as compared to single men). A 2017 study by the real estate company Redfin found that women tend to pay a smaller down payment on a home than men, which in turn can affect their ability to build home equity.
Women are also more likely to overpay on a mortgage despite having a better track record of paying them off or being denied a mortgage in the first place. These facts may contribute to a gender gap in the rate of women versus men who are able to secure a home equity loan as well as the amount they are able to secure. The result also points to an uneven financial foundation underpinning the credit market.
Parsing the Data: The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act and Data Collection
Another piece of legislation meant to combat discrimination in the housing market is the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA). HMDA allows for the collection of data on loans that are made publicly available in the interest of transparency and accountability. While data collection does, in theory, make it possible to diagnose gendered and other discrimination within the housing industry, some limitations to the HMDA data exist.
Firstly, gender is a spectrum comprising a range of identities that can be fluid and dynamic. This is not captured by the HMDA data, as it presents gender in the binary categories of male and female. The other two data fields are joint, to designate co-applicants of mixed gender, and “sex not available.”
The HMDA data can be inadequate since home equity loans taken out to consolidate credit card debt or to pay for medical expenses have typically been excluded.
As of 2018, after a large update to the HMDA data and an overhaul of the categories under which data was to be collected, the categories for loan purpose are as follows:
- Home purchase
- Home improvement
- Refinancing
- Cash-out refinancing
- Other purpose
- Not applicable
In 2018, the category of other purpose contained around 502,000 loans that wouldn’t even have been reported before 2015.
Another important consideration in identifying and fighting discrimination is the intersectionality of race, class, gender, and other aspects of identity. For example, researchers have identified “an elevated risk of vulnerability to high-cost lending among women of color” in the mortgage market. They have also identified historical inadequacies in the HMDA dataset, for example, missing information when it comes to race that implies a systematic bias that undermines fair lending.
In 2018, more ethnicity fields were added to the dataset, as well as racial subcategories that didn’t exist within the database previously. A new reporting category was even added to designate whether the race, ethnicity, or sex of an applicant was determined by visual observation or surname on the part of the data reporter. Although these changes are a step in the right direction for creating a more intricate and complete picture of the lending landscape and combating discrimination within it, the HMDA data is not perfect.
For starters, the data reporting process is highly nuanced and complex and relies on the attention to detail, compliance, oversight, consistency, and objectivity on the part of the staff working at the applicable financial institutions. Unfortunately, this is not always a given. It’s also worth underscoring the Federal Reserve’s own words on HMDA: it is “a disclosure law that relies upon public scrutiny for its effectiveness. It does not prohibit any specific activity of lenders.”
Important
Appraisal bias is when an appraiser uses a homeowner’s race or ethnicity or the ethnic demographics of the neighborhood when calculating a home’s value. Discrimination during the appraisal process is prohibited under the Fair Housing Act and Equal Credit Opportunity Act. If you believe you have experienced discrimination, call the Appraisal Complaint National Hotline at +1 (877) 739-0096.
Towards Better Data
In looking at the HMDA dataset, it would seem that more intricate and complete information gathering would be helpful in drawing conclusions as to whether a gender gap exists for specific types of loans, such as home equity loans. For example, not excluding certain loan purposes or lumping them into an “other” category could help researchers in painting a more complete picture.
AI and Fintech
Another arena in which data collection is central for preventing discrimination is artificial intelligence (AI) and financial technology (fintech). Historically, the approach to preventing discrimination has been to strive for neutrality—to remove the consideration of gender in a credit application, for example. This mentality carried forward from 20th-century legislation, such as the ECOA, into the building of “gender-blind” machine-learning algorithms and models.
However, researchers have come to the counterintuitive conclusion that factoring gender into algorithms actually improves their fairness. Otherwise, having been fed the input of historical lending data, AI is likely to reproduce the same discriminatory patterns that have been perpetuated historically—even if gender is not specified, as there are other correlating factors that create bias.
Given current anti-discrimination legislation such as the ECOA, creating models that differentiate based on gender is illegal. However, changing the law to accommodate this type of AI could open up the possibility of further discrimination.
Interpreting Data
All this is to say that while a useful tool in combating discrimination, data is not the be-all and end-all solution. In considering the HMDA data together with recent issues in the field of financial AI, it’s evident that although better data can help with preventing discrimination, it’s up to researchers to interpret it, intervene when necessary, and use it to advocate for the type of change we want to see. The same human element that creates patterns of discrimination can also prevent it.
Warning
Mortgage lending discrimination is illegal. If you think you’ve been discriminated against based on race, religion, sex, marital status, use of public assistance, national origin, disability, or age, there are steps you can take. One such step is to file a report, either to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) or the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
Can a Lender Discriminate on the Basis of Gender on a Home Equity Loan Application?
The law prohibits lenders from discriminating on the basis of sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, or marital status. They may only ask for your sex to collect data under the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA), which is meant to combat discrimination.
Do Women Get Fewer Home Equity Loans Approved Than Men?
The data on this is unclear. The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) data has not historically included home equity loans that are taken out for purposes such as credit card debt consolidation or medical expenses, and there may be other gaps or issues with the data.
Do Women Get Smaller Home Equity Loan Amounts Approved Than Men?
It is difficult to tell from the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) data. However, what we do know is that single women build less home equity over time than their male counterparts (92 cents to every single man’s dollar), and home equity loans and interest rates are partially dependent on the amount of home equity a borrower has.
The Bottom Line
Historically, gender discrimination has been a well-documented issue in the American credit industry, and legislation has been created in an attempt to prevent it. Although statistics show that inequity remains, using data alone to prove a gender gap exists in home equity lending can be challenging.
Reforms and technological advances can enhance data collection, helping to illuminate potential discrimination. However, recording and using this data responsibly is critical to improving policies and increasing financial inclusion in the future.